On the use of a BY-SA Creative Commons licence

Reading  the Implications of the NonCommercial (NC) Restriction for Educational Content this morning reminded me of a discussion at an OER workshop in November, during which the topic of which license to use naturally cropped up.

Skipping the discussions about the other licenses, the interesting point of discussion for me centred around the use of the licenses BY-NC-SA and ‘BY-SA‘.  The general consensus amongst the group was that ‘NC’ was used to stop the commercial world from looting from us.

However it was pointed out that in order for any item to be open then perhaps we need to revisit our thoughts on ‘NC’ and Derek Keats, writing on the use of ‘NC’ makes the following point that resurfaced the discussion for me:

“It is restricted culture. It is freer than it would be if it were subject to full copyright, but it is not free, and I am not free to use it to create free content. To use an analogy, it is free culture to the same degree that an inmate in a minimum security prison is freer than an inmate in a maximum security prison, but it is not free”.

the southern african journal of information and communication issue 7 2006 p77 keats, D

During the informal discussions it dawned on some of the group that perhaps something isn’t really open if it tied up with an ‘NC’ license.

So it was proposed that perhaps the use of the BY-SA is more appropriate as, and this is when the penny dropped – the use of ‘SA’ obliges  any content including commercial content to also be licensed as BY-SA, preventing pure commercial use without too becoming part of a creative commons license.  Thus, perhaps BY-SA is a better way to be more open with your content.

Being quite green with OER, It is a view that I am certainly leaning towards as my starting point until proven otherwise.

Hiring: Media Project Manager

The Open University is looking to fill a temporary position, the description includes:

You will need to have: effective project management, scheduling, communication and staff management skills; solid media production experience, ideally in an academic discipline relevant to the University’s faculties of Arts, Education and Language Studies, or Social Sciences; sound experience in instructional design; and confidence in working in a changing environment.

Job details

Heated hands, happy ride

After a freezing Bristol – London passport dash two weeks ago for a friend and blue fingers, I decided enough was enough.

So this weekend I had some affordable heated grips from bike it installed from the helpful duo of Kellaway motorcycles. I had considered the Honda set (£150 plus install, no thanks) and some Oxford options, but  plumped for the in-store no frills bike it grips (£45).

First reports are positive and my only gripe is that the grips themselves feel a little rough and BMX like, but no doubt in a few miles I won’t know what the old grips felt like.

Once I get a long single trip out of the way (next week to London) then I will know if they will last the winter.

DJ Shadow using mobile

An interview with DJ Shadow’s Marketing manager, in which he details how they are trying to capitalise on mobile at events:

Geo-targeted push notifications on the iPhone app to fans at each venue, asking the fan to take photos of the show. This has been going AMAZINGLY.

On the road with dj shadow – the shadowsphere meets the death star reaching fans online

I like that they are experimenting with new ideas such as geo-targeting, but also solving existing problems such as cash-only merch stalls now accepting mobile payments. This will all be normal in under ten years.

Speaking with James Clay

A few weeks ago James Clay and I spoke about the recent release of some e-learning related documents, most of which I wrote. He recorded the conversation as part of his “e-learning stuff podcast”.

Hear me in episode #61 talk about the relationship technology and  pedagogy, mobile learning and a host of other “stuff”.

Thank you James.

If found

Most of us have at least one USB memory stick in our possession at any one time. And most of us will have lost at least one of them too. They either disappear mysteriously or are left in the USB port of a computer in some far away land where nobody can return it, because after all it is just a generic USB stick.

To help improve the admittedly  slim chance of its return, I always add a simple text file in the root of the USB stick called ‘if found’. In this file I put my contact details so at least this way there is some hope that it will be returned:

Please contact me, Zak Mensah at tribehut @ gmail.com to return this stick that I have clearly forgotten.

Thank you!