Du durchsuchst gerade das Monatsarchiv für den Januar 2011.
Urheberrecht, Recht auf digitale Infrastruktur und die Auswirkungen der Digitalisierung auf das Bildungswesen – das waren die Themen der SPÖ-Klub-Enquete am 14.1.2011 im Parlament.
Nach der Eröffnung von Josef Cap und Sonja Ablinger sprach Dr. Till Kreutzer (Rechtsanwalt und Redakteur bei iRights.info) zum Thema
Geistiges Eigentum vs. Kreativität 2.0 – Brauchen wir neue Modelle für das Urheberrecht?
Steht die urheberrechtliche Revolution bevor? Für Kreutzer nicht sofort, aber in Langzeitperspektive sehr wohl. Es drängt sich die Vermutung auf, dass die Entwicklung des Urheberrechts den stattgefundenen Veränderungen deutlich hinterherhinkt. Kreutzer hat in seiner Dissertation die tatsächliche Entwicklung mit der rechtlichen verglichen (Grundthese: Die Anforderungen an das Urheberrecht haben sich durch technische Entwicklungen verändert). Auch der Umgang mit Ideen und Kreativität ist ein anderer: mehr denn je entsteht dies auf der Grundlage vorhandener Schöpfungen. Die unmittelbare Verwendung fremder Werke wird dabei häufig vorausgesetzt.
From the 4th to the 9th January 2011, the ICD weeklong seminar took place in Berlin. The ICD is an international, interdisciplinary community organising seminars, doing networking and bringing together people interested in cultural diplomacy, politics, leadership and research. I participated in two days due to this year’s focus “Digital Technology, Active Citizenship and the Society of the Future”.
It is worth pointing out that the ICD is, to a large extent, organised and driven by international graduates (mostly having a background in politics, international relations or cultural exchange) doing an internship in Berlin for at least 3 months. Apart from that, participants came from a multitude of backgrounds. I was particularly impressed by participant’s motivation and discussion and the organisers’ friendliness – sometimes those not being paid for their work do an even better job than those who are (not to forget about the permanent ICD people though)
2010 is history. While people are probably still recovering of New Year’s Eve celebrations, we are looking back on moments that moved us, made us laugh, left us wondering or gave us hope.
- Haiti is hit by a 7.0 magnitude earthquake, 230.000 people give their live. The world community quickly responds to the catastrophe.
- As of 2010 we create every two weeks that amount of information that human mankind created from its incarnation up to 2003.
- Eyjafjallajökull. This is not a form of diarrhea but one of Islands smaller ice caps and, in 2010, the reason why many flights had to be canceled because of a volcano ash cloud. In fact we missed our plane seat to the Berlin Open Data hackathon. Jules Verne called it a passage to the center of the earth , which we believe.
- Frankenstein is getting closer: Scientists claim to have created a human programmable bacteria. We are uncertain if this news is any better than our friends from outer space in lake mono.
- On Viennarecordia 2010 nobody challenged the existing record of peeling and eating three lemons faster than 28,5 seconds.
- Swedisch girls impose a serious threat to the public opening of non-disclosed files. Wikileaks founder Julian Assange opened classified records of the US, the Vatican and other administrations on a public wiki. It is yet open wheather this brings the world closer to peace or to war.
- China will help Europe to overcome financial problems in stabilizing the Euro by byuing their debts. We thought China tries to copy the good things, we stand corrected.
- 2010 was the year the government went public. Well, at least some of them. Open Linked Data is en vogue and Vienna follows the development.
The Center of E-Government assessed and evaluated international directions of digital public administration and translated it for our project partners to the intricacies of central European administration. 2010 was a new landmark of collaboration between citizens, economy, NGO’s and the administration. We feel that we’re right at the beginning of a new e-governance shaped by society. We will contunue to contribute to this new aera and to critically evaluate the developments.
Video review and preview
The stats helper monkeys at WordPress.com mulled over how this blog did in 2010, and here’s a high level summary of its overall blog health:

The Blog-Health-o-Meter™ reads Wow.
Crunchy numbers
The average container ship can carry about 4,500 containers. This blog was viewed about 19,000 times in 2010. If each view were a shipping container, your blog would have filled about 4 fully loaded ships.
In 2010, there were 136 new posts, growing the total archive of this blog to 289 posts. There were 223 pictures uploaded, taking up a total of 96mb. That’s about 4 pictures per week.
The busiest day of the year was June 21st with 295 views. The most popular post that day was Umfrage: Verwaltungsreform.
Where did they come from?
The top referring sites in 2010 were donau-uni.ac.at, twitter.com, facebook.com, brz.gv.at, and barcamp.at.
Some visitors came searching, mostly for twitter icon, twitter, open governance initiative, open government 2.0, and digital government.
Attractions in 2010
These are the posts and pages that got the most views in 2010.
Umfrage: Verwaltungsreform June 2010
12 comments and 2 Likes on WordPress.com
E-Government-Konferenz – Vormittag February 2010
5 comments
Abschlussevent Zukunftsweb July 2010
2 comments
Politics 2.0 – Obamas Wahlkampf June 2009
Konferenz: Effizienter Staat 2010 April 2010
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