Jan 11, 2016
Rights Management and Educational RepositoriesCharles [email protected]
Why bother?
• Copyright has always existed– What is different in the digital age?
• Are repositories particularly affected?
• Reasons for reluctance to share– Need to define/project terms and
conditions
– Need to handle other people’s rights properly
• Solutions?
Case study (to be published by Becta)• IVINURS (International Virtual Nursing
School)• Problem – reluctance to deposit in
repository (intraLibrary)• Solution – Selection of five licences
– Creative Commons (modify and no-modify)– IVINURS only (modify and no-modify)– Terms and conditions for web resources
• Result – enhanced deposit• Supplementary problem – no enhanced use?
– IVINURS licences are used but are not Common
Six-stage model
Recognition of rights
Assertion of rights
Expression of rights
Dissemination of rights
Exposure of rights
Enforcement of rights
DRMPolicyCreation
DRMPolicyProjection
Recognition of rights
DRMPolicyCreation
DRMPolicyProjection
Recognition of rights
Assertion of rights
Expression of rights
Dissemination of rights
Exposure of rights
Enforcement of rights
Who, Which, Uses
• staff, employers and suppliers (e.g. publishers) all need to be aware of who the rights holders are,
• which rights are concerned (e.g. copyright, moral rights, database rights)
• extent to which some rights might be relaxed to permit certain uses “All rights reserved” v. “Some rights reserved”
Assertion of rights
DRMPolicyCreation
DRMPolicyProjection
Recognition of rights
Assertion of rights
Expression of rights
Dissemination of rights
Exposure of rights
Enforcement of rights
Legal framework
• a legal framework in which rights holders can assert their rights in a form that is defendable under law
• Copyright – automatic
• Database rights1 – automatic in EU
• Moral rights – vary between countries
• Permitted uses – requires licences
• 1“obtaining, verification and presentation”
Licences
• Permitted uses and exclusions
• Get a lawyer to draw up a licence
• Use an existing licence– Creative Commons licences
– GPL (General Public Licences)
Permitted uses
• Render/Usage– display, print, play, execute
• Derivative/Reuse– modify/edit, excerpt/extract, annotate,
aggregate/embed
• Transport/Transfer– sell, lend/loan, give, lease, move/transfer,
duplicate/copy
• Utility/Asset management– backup, install, delete, verify, restore,
uninstall, save/export
Constraints
• Attribution – recognition of authorship• Location – geographic (e.g. Slovenia
only, .ac.uk domain only)• Duration – time-limited• Type of user – teachers, students, medics, …• Communities – European teachers, EdReNe
members• Number of users• Non-commercial only/ Education only• Properties – e.g. image resolution, file format• Sharealike – when redistribution is permitted
Choose licence(s)
• Most common requirements:– Attribution
– Closed/Open Community
– Modify/No derivatives
– Commercial/Non-commercial/Educational
• Suggests one licence will not do but probably needs no more than about six
Expression of rights
DRMPolicyCreation
DRMPolicyProjection
Recognition of rights
Assertion of rights
Expression of rights
Dissemination of rights
Exposure of rights
Enforcement of rights
Statements
• Copyright or licence statement
• Link between digital object and statement
• Format of statement:– Human readable
– Lawyer readable
– Machine readable (rights expression languages)
Human Readable
Lawyer-readable
Machine readable
<a rel="license" href="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.5/scotland/">
<img alt="Creative Commons License" style="border-width:0" src="http://i.creativecommons.org/l/by-nc-sa/2.5/scotland/88x31.png" /></a>
<br />This work is licenced under a <a rel="license" href="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.5/scotland/">Creative Commons Licence</a>.
- <o-ex:permission o-ex:id="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.0/">
<o-dd:display />
<o-dd:print />
<o-dd:play />
<o-dd:execute />
<o-dd:annotate />
<o-dd:aggregate />
<o-dd:give />
Digital Rights Expression Languages• Digital Rights Expression Languages (DRELs)• Examples
– XrML1 (eXtensible rights Markup Language)– ISO REL (based on XrML)– ODRL (Open Digital Rights Language)– METSRights (Metadata Encoding Transmission Standard)
• Benefits– Machine readable/searchable– Common basis on which to compare licences– Can be embedded with digital objects
1 Patent owned by ContentGuard (Xerox/Microsoft)
End of DRM Policy Creation
• Primarily internal decisions completed
• DRM Policy projection is mostly about external considerations
Dissemination of rights
DRMPolicyCreation
DRMPolicyProjection
Recognition of rights
Assertion of rights
Expression of rights
Dissemination of rights
Exposure of rights
Enforcement of rights
Searchable rights
• Repositories make information about their digital objects searchable by making the metadata searchable (SRU/SRW) and harvestable (OAI-PMH)
• Expose rights information through these searchable mechanisms
• Expose rights information to search engines (currently only Creative Commons recognised)
Harvested or federated search
Expose through SRU searches
Search engines (CC only)
Exposure of rights
DRMPolicyCreation
DRMPolicyProjection
Recognition of rights
Assertion of rights
Expression of rights
Dissemination of rights
Exposure of rights
Enforcement of rights
Recognising rights
• Usable at the point of discovery?
• Can you immediately recognise what rights are permitted:– By reading a licence agreement (?)
– By recognising the name of the licence and knowing its conditions (common licences)
– By recognising symbols that are widely used
Enforcement of rights
DRMPolicyCreation
DRMPolicyProjection
Recognition of rights
Assertion of rights
Expression of rights
Dissemination of rights
Exposure of rights
Enforcement of rights
Enforcement
• Enforcement of rights includes both protective measures to ensure that rights are not infringed and steps to be taken when infringements are detected.
• Authentication/authorisation• Licence agreement (click-through or written)• Maintain object-licence link (e.g watermark)• Legal protection as for copyright• Technological protection measures
(expensive)
Summing up
Recognition of rights
Assertion of rights
Expression of rights
Dissemination of rights
Exposure of rights
Enforcement of rights
DRMPolicyCreation
DRMPolicyProjection
Essential for all organisations
Requires infrastructure for greatest benefits
Enforcement technology not much used in education
Useful References
• JISC DRM Study and appendiceswww.intrallect.com/index.php/intrallect/knowledge_base/general_articles/jisc_drm_study_2004__1
• HEFCE IPR in e-Learningwww.intrallect.com/index.php/intrallect/knowledge_base/general_articles/case_studies_of_iprs_in_international_e_learning_programmes
• Creative Commons as a Licensing Solutionwww.intrallect.com/index.php/intrallect/knowledge_base/general_articles/creative_commons_licensing_solutions_for_the_common_information_environment__1
• JISC Legal – Publicationswww.jisclegal.ac.uk
• Digital Rights Expression Languageswww.jisc.ac.uk/uploaded_documents/TSW0603.pdf
• TrustDR (Digital Repositories)trustdr.ulster.ac.uk/outputs.php