Berklee Encourages Peer to Peer Music Trading 15
Yo Maing writes "According to this article at Wired magazine, students at the Berklee College of Music are being encouraged to share their audio and video works over p2p networks. The program is called Berklee Shares, and offers free music lessons for download. The downloads are licensed under the Creative Commons license, which has varying restrictions based their license builder page. Is this the music industry equivalent of the GPL?"
Hot damn! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Hot damn! (Score:1)
No (Score:2, Insightful)
It depends (Score:2, Informative)
1) Derivative works allowed with no restriction
2) No derivative works allowed
3) Derivative works allowed as long as they are licensed under the same license (i.e. GPL-style)
Re:No (Score:2)
oh, that berklee (Score:3, Funny)
Good to hear my homophonic sister school is doing something progressive
One important thing... (Score:1)
Re:One important thing... (Score:3, Informative)
Wouldn't it be nice if some of these students later become famous mega-popstars, and, after having had such a positive introduction to P2P filesharing by their alma mater, decide to give all their music away free and bring the RIAA et al to thier knees?
Yeah, I know, but it would be cool.
Clarification (Score:2, Informative)
They also have an online school [berkleemusic.com] where you can take courses taught by their professors.