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Sage

Great post. However, I'm appalled that you think the Board of Regents has any legitimate claim to the copyright of something published almost 400 years ago.

Katherine

gotta agree with you there, Sage! But that's what the permissions rule for reproducing images says on the Collections pages. They've even slapped copyright instructions on our teaching pages http://www.ou.edu/disclaimer/copyright.html That's why I'm building the science and popular culture webfolio off of the OU server at http://scipop.net and will eventually migrate all my teaching pages off. It's a sad state of affairs, especially for a public university. A Creative Commons license should be the rule!

Sage

In general, yes, CC licenses should be the rule. But with anything that is in the public domain because of age, it doesn't matter what copyright the university claims; they don't own the copyright because it is no longer eligible for copyright.

Museums try to do the same type of thing, and it's only slightly less offensive in that case (though I'm a little more sympathetic in the case of unique works as opposed to published ones).

See Bridgeman v. Corel:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bridgeman_Art_Library_v._Corel_Corp.

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