taking open accessibility to the next level

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Julia Vytopil, Ruurd Blom - FIAT IFTA conference Warsaw, 13 october 2016 Taking Open Accessibility to the next level Open collections for professional reuse

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Page 1: taking open accessibility to the next level

Julia Vytopil, Ruurd Blom - FIAT IFTA conference

Warsaw, 13 october 2016

Taking Open Accessibility

to the next level

Open collections for professional reuse

Page 2: taking open accessibility to the next level

Introduction

• The origin of the Institute for Sound and Vision

• Images for the future

• Collection Access department

• Background slides: stills from Open Images collection

Page 3: taking open accessibility to the next level

• User groups: education, professional, general public

• 2007-2014 Images for the Future: commercial

exploitation versus open access

• Broadcast archive sales for professional reuse

• Current: increase relevancy to create (re)use

Sound and Vision: accessibility policies

Page 4: taking open accessibility to the next level

“…to spread knowledge and

allow that knowledge to be built upon…”

Open access

• Participation & engagement

• Releasing social & commercial value

• Transparency

• Visibility

Page 5: taking open accessibility to the next level

Open Images

www.openimages.eu

“... an open media platform that offers

online access to audiovisual archive

material to stimulate creative reuse…”

Page 6: taking open accessibility to the next level

CC BY-SA: creative commons - by - share alike

Free to:

• Share — copy and redistribute the material in any medium or format

• Adapt — remix, transform, and build upon the material for any purpose,

even commercially

Under the following terms:

• Attribution

• ShareAlike

Creative Commons: CC-BY-SA

Still:Stadsgezichten Haarlem (1913)

Nederlands Instituut voor

Beeld en Geluid

Source: Open Images

Page 7: taking open accessibility to the next level

• Many views on Wikipedia

• Example snowball effect: Lepelaar (spoonbill bird)

• Track & trace

Snowball effect

Page 8: taking open accessibility to the next level

• Public domain

• Creative Commons (cc-by-sa)

• general public, education & pro’s!

Next level

“...When we share, everyone wins…”

Page 9: taking open accessibility to the next level

Copyright limitations

• Copyright is a bundle of rights

• One product can include large number of copyright relevant works

• Each copyright has its own (set of) right holders

Page 10: taking open accessibility to the next level

.

Flowchart

• Awareness

• Structure

• Report, capture and retrieval

• Choices, risk analysis

Page 11: taking open accessibility to the next level

• Experiment, test cases

• Fine-tuning

• Capture outcomes in rights metadata

Beta: flowchart

Page 12: taking open accessibility to the next level

• From Creative industries and new media to professionals

• Availability through separate platform Open Images

• Step by step implementation to improve knowledge and workflows

• Eventually: integrated in catalogue

New user groups

Page 13: taking open accessibility to the next level

• What does it mean? Attribution – Share alike

• Purposes: online productions, physical

exhibtions, cinema, commercials,

broadcast productions…

Constraints: “share alike”

Page 14: taking open accessibility to the next level

• Case law not available yet

• Creating precedents and exploring boundaries

• Documenting examples

Consequences

Page 15: taking open accessibility to the next level

• Small producers and directors: online content production

• Non-profit organisations: embedding content on demand

• Cultural institutions? Broadcast?

For whom?

Page 16: taking open accessibility to the next level

• What to do with other licensed fragments in the edited result?

• Where to share alike? When? How? In what quality?

• What if the result is a physical product?

• What do we do with material that could be cc-by-sa but isn’t uploaded yet?

• Where do we report the license status and due diligence?

Questions...

Page 17: taking open accessibility to the next level

• Financial impact analysis

• Policy for licence enforcement

• Tracking via video fingerprinting

Consequences

Page 18: taking open accessibility to the next level

• Communication

• Licence fee structure

• Marketing to user groups

• Uploading more material

Next steps

Page 19: taking open accessibility to the next level

Conclusion

Page 20: taking open accessibility to the next level

The end - contact

Julia Vytopil: [email protected]

Ruurd Blom: [email protected]

Twitter: @vytopil @RuurdBlom