• On MovieTome: See the villain of IRON MAN 2!
December 2, 2008 7:52 AM PST

Coalition urges Obama to adopt open transition

by Stephanie Condon
  • Font size
  • Print
  • 1 comment

President-elect Barack Obama's transition team anticipated the requests of open government advocates by copyrighting Change.gov under a Creative Commons license, but a coalition of groups in favor of more online freedom is asking for more.

The group released an open letter Tuesday morning to the Obama team, urging them to adopt certain principles on Change.gov so that no one is blocked in sharing or remixing transition-created material. The signatories include Web 2.0 evangelist Tim O'Reilly, Stanford Law professor Larry Lessig, MoveOn.org, Newt Gingrich's organization American Solutions, and the government transparency group the Sunlight Foundation. Visitors to the site hosting the letter can add their name to the petition endorsing its principles.

The letter encourages eliminating legal barriers to sharing material from Change.gov. The transition team achieved this by copyrighting the site under the Creative Commons license, the letter says.

"The transition's commitment to this principle is enormously important, and its attention to this matter--so quickly, and in midst of so many pressing issues--deserves praise," it says.

It also asks that there be no technological barriers for sharing content. For instance, it says, the transition team should not exclusively use YouTube to post videos, since YouTube does not authorize videos on its site to be downloaded.

The letter also says transition-produced content should not unfairly benefit one commercial entity over another or commercial entities over noncommercial entities.

"Ultimately, to ensure that new media can cover breaking news on a level playing field with traditional media, it would be advisable to carry press conferences and other live media events in real time on the Web site," the letter says.

The group is aiming to encourage the Obama team to adopt open Internet principles not only during the transition, but as it starts governing as well.

Stephanie Condon is a staff writer for CNET News focused on the intersection of technology and politics. She is based in Washington, D.C. E-mail Stephanie.

advertisement
 
Business supplies and services can get expensive. Get smart spending tips and learn about new cost-saving opportunities for your business
Recent posts from Politics and Law
What Intel just bought for $1.25 billion: Less risk
Justice Dept. asked for news site's visitor lists
EC formally objects to Oracle buying Sun
Going rogue? Palin bans gadgets, reporters from speech
Europe getting 'Internet freedom' law
Fiorina's first act as senator: Merge California and Nevada
Congress may require ISPs to block fraud sites
New York antitrust suit accuses Intel of bribery
Add a Comment (Log in or register)
by sanenazok December 2, 2008 9:09 AM PST
You just can't make some people happy. Creative Commons is permissive enough. Soon, Obama's messages and outputs will be part of the federal government and so open for everyone to do anything with.
Reply to this comment
advertisement

A CNET Conversation with Eric Schmidt

CNET's Tom Krazit and Molly Wood sit down with Google CEO Eric Schmidt to discuss the future of Android, the Chrome OS, the problem of real-time search indexing, and more.

Verizon tests sending RIAA copyright notices

The No. 2 phone company, known for its reluctance to intervene in antipiracy cases, strikes an agreement to forward copyright notices on behalf of the music industry.

About Politics and Law

News at the intersection of technology, politics, and law, ranging from intellectual property to censorship to tech policy.

Add this feed to your online news reader

Politics and Law topics

advertisement
advertisement

Inside CNET News

Scroll Left Scroll Right