At 03:37 p.m. 2/12/2014, Mark Foster wrote:
Basically the community needs to decide whether theyre happy for folks to make commercial use of NZNOG content (excluding -NC) or make derivative content (-ND).
no - each client who paid for the job is the person who advises us. Over the 10 years that has varied with R2 sponsoring quite heavily as well.
For reference the Linux Conf Au 2014 keynotes are specifically published CC-BY-SA.
LCA-2010 is held by R2 http://www.r2.co.nz/20100118/ :-) I'd leave the dogs sleeping, but make a resolution for going forward. That can be a community decision. Or you can ask each presenter to advise on their "rights". I'm currently uploading a different conference where some speakers withheld recording rights. We record them anyway and just hold the footage. They usually ask to see it afterwards. Some speakers hold recording rights forgetting that we are live streaming. Its a confused world. I'm fast coming to the conclusion that if a speaker withholds right, you take them off the programme. Theres no difference between speaking to an audience in a room or on the web. Its an audience and you are "broadcasting" your talk. But it might just be me getting "old and grumpy" (tm) What is worth noting, is that for a typical conference with 1-200 attendees, where its streamed or recorded, the online audience is often much greater than the room audience. So you need to up the production values, especially lighting and sound. The room audience really becomes the "studio audience".