Privacy Engineering for Digital Rights Management Systems
DRM '01 Revised Papers from the ACM CCS-8 Workshop on Security and Privacy in Digital Rights Management
Communications of the ACM - Organic user interfaces
Efficient overlap and content reuse detection in blogs and online news articles
Proceedings of the 18th international conference on World wide web
Semantic web policies – a discussion of requirements and research issues
ESWC'06 Proceedings of the 3rd European conference on The Semantic Web: research and applications
Extended rights vocabulary for authoring tools interoperability
Proceedings of the First International Conference on Internet Multimedia Computing and Service
A self-policing policy language
ISWC'10 Proceedings of the 9th international semantic web conference on The semantic web - Volume Part I
Computers can't give credit: how automatic attribution falls short in an online remixing community
Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
ShareAlike your data: self-referential usage policies for the semantic web
ISWC'11 Proceedings of the 10th international conference on The semantic web - Volume Part I
Reactive policies for the semantic web
ESWC'10 Proceedings of the 7th international conference on The Semantic Web: research and Applications - Volume Part I
Augmenting the web with accountability
Proceedings of the 21st international conference companion on World Wide Web
: Helping in the legal use of open images
Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
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The Web allows users to share their work very effectively leading to the rapid re-use and remixing of content on the Web including text, images, and videos. Scientific research data, social networks, blogs, photo sharing sites and other such applications known collectively as the Social Web have lots of increasingly complex information. Such information from several Web pages can be very easily aggregated, mashed up and presented in other Web pages. Content generation of this nature inevitably leads to many copyright and license violations, motivating research into effective methods to detect and prevent such violations. This is supported by an experiment on Creative Commons (CC) attribution license violations from samples of Web pages that had at least one embedded Flickr image, which revealed that the attribution license violation rate of Flickr images on the Web is around 70-90%. Our primary objective is to enable users to do the right thing and comply with CC licenses associated with Web media, instead of preventing them from doing the wrong thing or detecting violations of these licenses. As a solution, we have implemented two applications: (1) Attribution License Violations Validator, which can be used to validate users' derived work against attribution licenses of reused media and, (2) Semantic Clipboard, which provides license awareness of Web media and enables users to copy them along with the appropriate license metadata.