Title: The OSS Watch and OpenSpires Projects
1The OSS Watch and OpenSpires Projects
- Rowan Wilson, Legal and Research Officer
2- Part of the HEA/JISC-funded Open Educational
Resources Programme - Two main objectives
- Release audio and video podcasts as OER (open
content) - Investigate and disseminate the institutional
implication of OER release
3- Our approach
- Built on the success of podcasts.ox.ac.uk and
iTunesU widespread participation providing a
pool of academics to approach - Inhabit an existing content production workflow
(iTunesU) and adapted it to make OER release a
low-effort option (including IPR process) - Encouraged devolved model of content production
but supported the majority of recordings from the
podcasting service
4- Achievements so far
- 8 lecture series (around 65-70 hours)
- 30 sets of other resources (including seminars,
interviews, conference presentations and panel
discussions). - Over 180 media items are currently available as
open content through http//podcasts.ox.ac.uk/open
spires.html - Over 100 Oxford academics and visiting have
signed theOpenSpires (Creative Commons) licence - Subject areas already covered include politics,
economics, environmental change, business,
research ethics, medicine, physics, English,
classics, art history, philosophy ....
5(No Transcript)
6- OSS Watch
- Founded in 2003 in response to JISC call
- Drafted the JISCs Open Source Policy
- Two successful subsequent bids
- Uniquely, we are non-advocacy
7 OSS Watch provides unbiased advice and
guidance on the use, development, and licensing
of free and open source software. OSS Watch is
funded by the JISC and its services are available
free-of-charge to UK higher and further
education. If you want to find out more about
open source software, we're the people to
ask. OSS Watch is an advisory service so we can
help your project build an open development
community but we cannot write your code for
you.
8- We provide
- Quality-assured reusable (CC BY-SA) content on
FOSS topics (www.oss-watch.ac.uk) - Free consultancy on open development, community
building, software licensing and FOSS procurement
to HE and FE sectors - Events (Transfer Summit, Keble College, Oxford,
24-25 June) - Strategic projects
9- What is Free and Open Source Software?
- Software that the user has the right to adapt
and distribute - Access to the source code
- Often available at minimal or no cost
- Permits commercial reuse
- Often maintained and developed by a community
- Increasingly high public profile and market
share (Linux, Apache httpd, Firefox,
OpenOffice.org, Xensource) - Basis of later open content licences like
Creative Commons
10- Whats the connection?
- Ethically-motivated beginnings
- FOSS had principles of education and individual
freedom at its root - A response to perceived enclosure of intellectual
commons - General licensing models
- An offer open to all
- No explicit agreement necessary
- The centrality of community
- Pooling of resources to benefit and educate
11- How do they compare?
- Open content is less than ten years old
- OER efforts are less than 3 years old
- FOSS is between 20-30 years old (albeit with a
definite growth spurt in the last 12)
12- How do they compare?
- Ethically-motivated beginnings
- FOSS has developed beyond purely ethically-driven
agenda into a compelling and pragmatic model for
software development - General licensing models
- FOSS community has always rejected limitations on
commercial use - FOSS licences have proliferated wildly
- The centrality of community
- FOSS projects have sited themselves somewhere
between two approaches to community broadcast or
collaborate
13- The Broadcast Model
- Closed process of development
- Owned by a single institution or closed
consortium - Throwing it over the wall when its done
- Many academic projects take this approach
- External contributions are generally not expected
(and are perhaps unwelcome) - Large and successful FOSS projects like
OpenOffice also use this model - This model is used by most OER projects,
including ours
14- The Collaborate Model
- Public discussion of development roadmap
- Project often sits outside contributor
organisations, perhaps in a NFP or charitable
foundation - Releases are built in public
- External contributions are encouraged
- Large and successful FOSS projects like Apache
httpd use this model - OSS Watch favours this approach for software
projects for sustainability reasons
15- Sustainability benefits of the Collaborate model
for software - Project history is public, design decisions
documented - Under the bus factor greatly reduced
- External bodies wanting to commit effort or
funding have a convenient was of assessing the
public impact of the projects work up to that
point
16- Possible benefits of the Collaborate model for
OER - Reuse can be easier to track
- Duplication of effort can be reduced
- For well-known projects rewards and recognition
for contributors is generated automatically by
association, with contributions publicly
trackable - Projects both generate useful material and teach
collaborative working methods
17- However
- Collaboration requires additional effort
- OSS Watch strategic projects
- IP rights must be handled in a disciplined way
- Project processes must be documented and stuck to
- Design decision-making process
- How contributions are made
- How disagreements are settled
- Perhaps software is different
- Easier to identify and agree on quality criteria?
- Perhaps teachers are just different
18http//www.flossproject.org/papers/20060614/Rishab
GHOSH-gartner2.pdf
19- Egocentrism
- Related to the previously topic, is reuse by
authors, as opposed to nonauthors, so extensive
simply because they know what exists in their own
content, or is there a bias to use ones own work
(i.e., a not-created-here attitude even among
those who extol the virtue of reuse)? The fact
that a person is creating a collection within an
OER repository might indicate a greater
willingness to use someone elses creation, but
it certainly is not guaranteed. It is possible
that the person using an OER is motivated by the
free hosting of content or the proliferation
possibilities for their own content. - Sean Duncan, "Patterns of Learning Object Reuse
in the Connexions Repository," - Connexions, June 2, 2009, http//cnx.org/content/
m23642/1.3/
20- In conclusion
- Truly collaborative open development in software
improves project sustainability - Potentially OER projects could gain additional
benefits for both their participants and sponsors
if they embraced collaborative open development
models - Potentially code is different
21- More information
- http//openspires.oucs.ox.ac.uk/
- http//www.oss-watch.ac.uk/
- rowan.wilson_at_oucs.ox.ac.uk
- Thank you!