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Hackaday Newsletter 0x63

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hackaday.com

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editor@hackaday.com

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Fri, Feb 3, 2023 07:53 PM

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How to make sure public data stays open Detecting Machine-Generated Content: an Easier Task for Mach

How to make sure public data stays open [HACKADAY]( Detecting Machine-Generated Content: an Easier Task for Machine or Human? [Read Article Now»]( Copyright Data, but Do it Right By [Elliot Williams]( Copyright law is a triple-edged sword. Historically, it has been used to make sure that authors and rock musicians get their due, but it’s also been extended to the breaking point by firms like Disney. Strangely, a concept that protected creative arts got pressed into duty in the 1980s to [protect the writing down of computer instructions]( ironically a comparatively few bytes of BIOS code. But as long as we’re going down this strange road where assembly language is creative art, [copyright law could also be used to protect the openness of software as well](. And doing so has given tremendous legal backbone to the open and free software movements. So let’s muddy the waters further. Looking at cases like the [CDDB fiasco]( or the most recent sale of [ADSB Exchange]( what I see is a community of people providing data to an open resource, in the belief that they are building something for the greater good. And then someone comes along, closes up the database, and sells it. What prevents this from happening in the open-software world? Copyright law. What is the equivalent of copyright for datasets? Strangely enough, [that same copyright law](. Data, being facts, can’t be copyrighted. But datasets are purposeful collections of data. And just like computer programs, datasets can be licensed with a restrictive copyright or a permissive copyleft. Indeed, they must, because the same presumption of restrictive copyright is the default. I scoured all over the ADSB Exchange website to find any notice of the copyright / copyleft status of their dataset taken as a whole, and couldn’t find any. My read is that this means that the dataset is the exclusive property of its owner. The folks who were contributing to ADSB Exchange were, as far as I can tell, contributing to a dataset that they couldn’t modify or redistribute. To be a free and open dataset, to be shared freely, copied, and remixed, it would need a copyleft license like Creative Commons or [the Open Data Commons license](. So I’ll admit that I’m surprised to have not seen permissive licenses used around community-based open data projects, especially projects like ADSB Exchange, where all of the software that drives it is open source. Is this just because we don’t know enough about them? Maybe it’s time for that to change, because copyright on datasets is the law of the land, no matter how absurd it may sound on the face, and the closed version is the default. If you want your data contributions to be free, make sure that the project has a free data license. From the Blog --------------------------------------------------------------- [What Losing Everything Taught Me About Backing Up]( By [Lewin Day]( Lewin got robbed, and his backup strategy (or lack thereof) got tested. [Read more »]( [China’s New 100 MPH Train Runs on Hydrogen and Supercaps]( By [Lewin Day]( Hydrogen fuel cells may make sense for some trains, with a dose of supercapacitors backing them up. [Read more »]( [The Radioactive Source Missing in Australian Desert Has Been Found]( By [Lewin Day]( How do you find a hot needle in a haystack? [Read more »]( [Hackaday Podcast]( [Hackaday Podcast 204: Cesium, Colorful Cast Buttons, and CNC Pizza]( By [Hackaday Editors]( What happened last week on Hackaday? The Podcast will get you up to speed. [Read more »]( If You Missed It --------------------------------------------------------------- [The Times they are A-Chaining]( [Surgery on An LED To Preserve Vintage Aesthetics]( [Wizards Get Creative, Maybe Save the World]( [RetroArch on a LeapFrog Leapster GS]( [SteamDeck: Become Printer]( [Want Better 0402 Reflow? Consider These Footprints!]( [Hackaday]( NEVER MISS A HACK [Share]( [Share]( [Share]( [Terms of Use]( [Privacy Policy]( [Hackaday.io]( [Hackaday.com]( This email was sent to {EMAIL} [why did I get this?]( [unsubscribe from this list]( [update preferences]( Hackaday.com · 61 S Fair Oaks Ave Ste 200 · Pasadena, CA 91105-2270 · USA

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