P2P Licensing: Difference between revisions
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In other cases licensing can allow peers in networks to continue to access physical works created within networks. Used in this manner, licensing also becomes a [[P2P Currency System]]. Some additional information can be found at [[Equity-based Licenses]]. | In other cases licensing can allow peers in networks to continue to access physical works created within networks. Used in this manner, licensing also becomes a [[P2P Currency System]]. Some additional information can be found at [[Equity-based Licenses]]. | ||
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Revision as of 02:29, 17 July 2010
Introduction to P2P Licensing
P2P Licensing is a P2P Protocol where Peers and the P2P Networks in which they collaborate allow peers in the network, or sometimes outside the network as well, to use, re-use, or modify work products in ways that benefit the peers, the network, and most significantly the Commons that unifies the network.
Licensing as an agreement between peers
Anyone can write their own license that governs the use of their created works. Licensing has become more and more important as groups of peers work together to refine creative works in a network. Because they are collaborating it is important that the creative works are able to be modified and improved by peers in the network. In order to facilitate this practice a licensing scheme is created or used. Licensing facilitates collaboration within the network, and defines the rights of those who would wish to make use of the creative works outside the process of collaboration.
Licensing and a Commons Based P2P Network
A commons can be simply defined as the creative works of a peer network that are intended for use by all peers in the network. Licensing is the use P2P Protocol to define the use, reuse, modification, or general treatment of creative works. Licensing is a way of establishing a collaboration commons, a method and agreement about working together in a network. The creative works facilitated through this licensing scheme, then, comprise an aspect of the commons associated with the network.
Licensing and Peer Equity
Licensing can facilitate peer equity within a network. A license to use the creative works of a network can mean much more than the ability to make a copy of a photograph or a piece of software. In cases where the works of a network are digital and easily replicated licensing allows peers to work together within the network, and also to insure that they will still have access to their works when they no longer actively collaborate with the network.
In other cases licensing can allow peers in networks to continue to access physical works created within networks. Used in this manner, licensing also becomes a P2P Currency System. Some additional information can be found at Equity-based Licenses.
Recent articles in the more general Licensing category
- Open Value Network Digital Resource License
- Impact Licensing
- Impact Licensing Initiative
- Fair Source Licenses
- Post-Open Licenses
- Debate about the Copyfair Proposals of the P2P Foundation
- Hive Commons License
- Permissive Open Source Licenses vs Copyleft Licenses
- 1Hive Commons
- Data Commons for Food Security
- Open Data Commons
- Tyranny of Openness in Peer Production
- Commons Clause
- Ethical Source Software
- Ethical Source Movement
- Contributor Covenant
- Hippocratic License
- Trademark-Based Contract for OSS Maintainers
- Do No Harm License
- European Opensource and Free Software Law Event
- Cryptographic Autonomy License
- Decentralized Autonomous Licence
- Coopyright
- Open Source Assurance Agreement
- Pando
- Ryhope Lab
- License Zero as Dual License Solution for Fair Funding of Open Source Development
- MIT Fablab Charter
- Creator-Endorsed Mark
- Commons Management Agreement
- Fab Mob Reciprocal License for the Legal Contractualisation of Commons
- License Zero
- What is the Source in Open Source Hardware
- Data Commons License
- People’s Ethical Appropriation Reciprocity License
- Design Rights
- Open Source Seeds Initiative
- CoopCycle
- Creative Barcode
- Copyfair
- Fair Source
- Contributive Commons as Tools for Reciprocity
- Open Source Architecture License
- Open Architecture
- General Political License
- Open Permissions Platform
- Network Commons License
- Fair Source License
- Stream To Own
- Fair Commons Generic License
- Employee Owned Source Code
- Why Employee Owned Source Code is a Problematic Solution
- Voluntary Own To Share Digital Object Licensing Agreement
- Dynamic Royalty License
- Creative Commons NonCommercial License
- Copyright-Based Licenses
- Copyleft for Housing
- CopyFair License
- FairlyShare
- Contributor License Agreement
- Social Contract License
- Indie Framework License
- Indie Commons License
- Solderpad Hardware License
- Voluntary Basic Capital License
- State of the Creative Commons
- Critique of the Peer Production License
- Defensive Aggregators
- Defensive Patent License
- Open Source Drug Discovery
- Equitable Access and Neglected Disease Licensing
- HapMap Data Access Agreement
- General Public Licence for Plant Germplasm
- Copysol License
- License for the Solidarity Economy
- Extended Fair Uses Public License
- Eli Greenbaum on 3D Printing Open Hardware Licenses
- Commons-Based Reciprocity Licenses To Advance Reciprocity for the Commons
- Commons-Based Reciprocity Licenses
- Model Patent License Agreement
- Open Trademarks
- Open Source Drug Discovery Attribution and Authorship Policy
- Gene Patents and Collaborative Licensing Models
- Creative Commons 4.0
- Click-Use Licences
- Crown Copyright
- Open IP Licensing Guaranteed by Non-Profits
- TLDR Legal
- Open Source Licenses Summarized and Explained in Plain English
- Software Licenses Metamap
- BSD License
- Permissive Free Software License
- Dual Licensing in the Open Source Software Industry
- Multi-Licensing
- Brief History of Open Source Hardware Organizations and Definitions
- Open Design Foundation
- Open Design Circuits
- Open Hardware Specification Project
- Community Reporter Social Licence
- Social Licence
- Pragmatic Critique of the Peer Production License
- Open Source Seeds License
- Business Source
- Open Design Definition
- CERN Open Hardware License
- Three-Dimensional Printing Open License
- 3D Printing and Open Source Hardware Licensing
- Farmers Rights and Open Source Licensing
- Open Knowledge Stack
- Timed Release License
- Innovator's Patent Agreement
- Free and Open Source Licenses in Community Life
- Creative Commons in Open Design
- Enter Colaboratorio Copyleft/es
- Cine CC donostia/es
- Festival de Cine Creative Commons Ciudad de México/es
- RedPaTodos/es
- Cambalache/es
- Wiki loves monuments/es
- Non-Dominium
- Equitable Health Research Licensing
- Open Money License
- Libre Software Meeting
- Andrew Katz on Copyleft Licensing for Hardware
- Open Unified Registry with Public License
- Open Licensed Digital Media
- Clear Bits
- Defensive Patent Pool for Open Source Projects and Businesses
- Traditional Knowledge Commons License
- Foss Licensing Primer
- Certified Open Hardware Licenses
- Recommended Open Hardware Licenses
- Creative Commons is to Free Culture what Shareware is to Free Software
- Slowly Opening License
- Tivoization
- SFLC Guide to Legal Issues and GPL Compliance
- Open Copyright License
- BioBrick Public Agreement
- Open Source Licensing as a Legal and Economic Modality for the Dissemination of Renewable Energy
- CSTART Social Contract
- Mach 30 Open Design Pledge
- Defining Open Content Licenses
- OER Licensing Models
- Open Content Licensing From Theory to Practice
- Owning the Right to Open Up Access to Scientific Publications
- Power of Open
- Open Licensing for Scientific Innovation
- Software Freedom Conservancy
- Patentleft
- Open Attribute
- Jordan Hatcher on Open Licenses
- Jordan Hatcher
- Open Patent Movement
- Open Patent Certification Mark
- Open Patents
- Open Patent License
- Open Hardware License
- Copyleft
- Flat World Knowledge
- Eric Frank on Openly-Licensed Textbooks
- Canonical Contributor Agreement
- Peer Production License
- Wireless Common License
- Internet Sharing License
- General Public License for Plant Germplasm
- Plants, Property, and the Promise of Open Source Biology
- Traditional Knowledge Commons
- Public Domain Mark
- Jordan Hatcher on Licensing Open Data
- Implementing a Traditional Knowledge Commons
- Creative Commons Rights Expression Language
- 100 Point Open Source Projects
- Copyright and Open Source
- Copyright, Copyleft and the Creative Anti-Commons
- UK Government Licensing Framework
- Sharing Law
- Patent Tools Commons
- Open Government License
- OSHW 2010 Summit Panel on Open Hardware Licenses and Norms
- Guidelines for Free System Distributions
- GPL Violations
- Sustainable Economies Law Center
- License Proliferation
- Genero Initiative
- Open Source Voting License
- Open Invention Network
- Balloon License
- GNU Lesser General Public License
- Voluntary Collective Licensing of Music File Sharing
- Copyfarleft and Copyjustright
- Open Source Hardware Definition
- Share Alike
- Lawrence Lessig
- Equitable Open Source
- Open Data Licenses
- Abuse of Open Licenses
- Network Service Licenses
- Silo license
- Trust License
- Reciprocal Open License