Prompt 04: Collective agreements: Difference between revisions

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Prompt #04 takes on Gary Hall's remark that, similar to Creative Commons, the CC4r might put too much agency with sovereign individual (human) users. He argues that Creative Commons foster individuating processes rather than advocating for collective agreements. They are not contributing to social processes of production, management, and maintenance.
Prompt 04 takes on Gary Hall's remark that, similar to Creative Commons, the CC4r might put too much agency with sovereign individual (human) users. He argues that Creative Commons foster individuating processes rather than advocating for collective agreements. They are not contributing to social processes of production, management, and maintenance.


→ How could the CC4r be contributing to social processes? Could collective conditions for re-use be thought of as relational, instead of counting on individual responsibility?
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How could the CC4r be contributing to social processes? Could collective conditions for re-use be thought of as relational, instead of counting on individual responsibility?
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[[File:Prompt Gary Hall Experimenting with Copyright Licences.png|thumb|left|800px]]
[[File:Prompt Gary Hall Experimenting with Copyright Licences.png|thumb|left|800px]]
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Source: Gary Hall, Experimenting with Copyright Licences (Apr 20, 2023) https://copim.pubpub.org/pub/combinatorial-books-documentation-copyright-licences-post6/release/1
Source: Gary Hall, Experimenting with Copyright Licences (Apr 20, 2023) https://copim.pubpub.org/pub/combinatorial-books-documentation-copyright-licences-post6/release/1
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[[Category: Prompts]]
[[Category: Prompts]]

Revision as of 16:48, 13 April 2024

Prompt 04 takes on Gary Hall's remark that, similar to Creative Commons, the CC4r might put too much agency with sovereign individual (human) users. He argues that Creative Commons foster individuating processes rather than advocating for collective agreements. They are not contributing to social processes of production, management, and maintenance.

How could the CC4r be contributing to social processes? Could collective conditions for re-use be thought of as relational, instead of counting on individual responsibility?


Source: Gary Hall, Experimenting with Copyright Licences (Apr 20, 2023) https://copim.pubpub.org/pub/combinatorial-books-documentation-copyright-licences-post6/release/1