I was just looking at Nashville Public Library’s website – very attractive site! They redesigned last year, and now have a great website, full of web 2.0-ish goodness.
And then I saw this in their footer: “Copyright © 2006 Nashville Public
Library, All Rights Reserved.” I don’t have a beef with NPL – the same type of thing can be found on my website and many others, too.
But I do have a question: is this really necessary? Copyright is generally placed on a website to say “ask before you use the stuff found on this website.” So why not go the extra mile and use a Creative Commons license? That way, instead of having a sign on your website that says stop!, you’ll have a sign that says “feel free to re-use our content – we wrote it for you, after all! Just let us know about it!”
It’s a small way to encourage your customers to start conversations – remember my Inviting Participation mantra?
royce says
Agreed. Why not the phrase:
“If it is ours: take it. If it belongs to someone else: ask.”
Copyright is one of those topics that I would bet most people know nothing about, except for the “if i put it in the mail its copyrighted” myth. In which case, they still don’t know anything about copyright.
On another note: Wouldn’t a Kansas 2.0 conference be cool?
royce says
Agreed. Why not the phrase:
“If it is ours: take it. If it belongs to someone else: ask.”
Copyright is one of those topics that I would bet most people know nothing about, except for the “if i put it in the mail its copyrighted” myth. In which case, they still don’t know anything about copyright.
On another note: Wouldn’t a Kansas 2.0 conference be cool?
david lee king says
Yes, a Kansas 2.0 conference WOULD be cool! If you’re serious, I’d bet NEKLS would help… and we could probably set up a meeting at TSCPL, too…
Hmm… the possibilities!
david lee king says
Yes, a Kansas 2.0 conference WOULD be cool! If you’re serious, I’d bet NEKLS would help… and we could probably set up a meeting at TSCPL, too…
Hmm… the possibilities!