CopyCamp 2014: detailed programme
Thursday, 06.11.2014
13.00-14.00: registration
ROOM A
14.00-14.15: opening of the conference
14.15-14.45: plenary:
Jarosław Lipszyc, Fundacja Nowoczesna Polska
Simon Morrison, Google
Krzysztof Lewandowski, ZAiKS
Jacek Łęgiewicz, Samsung
14.45-15.30: Cory Doctorow: Information Doesn’t Want to Be Free
15.30-15.45: coffee break
15.45-17.00:
Eoin O’Dell: The Future of Copyright: The Example of Irish Copyright Reform
Peter Mezei: Digital exhaustion after the ReDigi and UsedSoft decisions
Jan Sowa: „I wish we didn’t use the word: theft”. Polish writers on intellectual property, copyright and so called piracy
Alek Tarkowski: Can copyright reform save the Open Movement?
Irina Baraliuc: Intellectual privacy online: Is there space on Facebook for intellectual development and exploration?
Konrad Gliściński: This parrot is no more or where is all the loss
17.00-17.30: coffee break
17.30-18.45:
Gaetano Dimita: The global dissemination treaty – a proposal
Marcin Węgrzynowski: Hairdresser in the fight against the system
Krzysztof Zuber: Hairdressers also have to follow copyright
Krzysztof Siewicz: Freedom of information of an individual
Bogna Kietlińska/Mariusz Piotrowski: Research on the public debate about copyright – Poland 2012-2013
Benjamin White: At the Coal Face of Copyright – Data Mining, Here, Now and in the Future
18.45-19.15: coffee break
19.15-20.15:
Michał Wiśniewski: On (not) obeying copyright
Anna Gruhn: Will I patent it? What and why do the most patently active Polish universities patent?
Matej Myśka: Friends or Foes? The Creative Commons Licenses and Collective Rights Management
Joanna Matczuk: Non-literal copying – the limits of freedom of creative expression in the context of the copyright law
Dorota H. Kutyła: Information architecture – towards the cult of beauty
20.15-20.30: closing of the conference
ROOM B
14.00-15.30: live broadcast from ROOM A
15.30-15.45: coffee break
15.45-17.00:
Wojciech Hardy: Internet piracy vs booksale
Natalia Mileszyk: Playing with corporations: trademarks vs freedom of speech
Dimitri Dimitrov: Hacking Brussels: Liquid lobbying to change the copyright narrative
Rafał Sikorski: In search for an effective model of remuneration for usage of works within private fair use
Michał 'rysiek’ Woźniak: The Praise of Copyleft
Piotr Waglowski: Official materials as non-copyrighted-work
17.00-17.30: coffee break
17.30-18.45:
Attila Szervác: Copyright restrictions vs Human Rights
Miłada Jędrysik: Moominvalley or Mordor? Future scenarios of the right to culture – research output
Yngve Slettholm: Licensing of cultural heritage – the Bookshelf experience
Katarzyna „Novika” Nowicka: Copyright vs promotion of music
Vladimir Kharitonov: The digital changes all for business and nothing for the book
Rafał Kownacki: Author’s right to remuneration as a fundamental human right
18.45-19.15: coffee break
19.15-20.15:
Mariusz Gniadek: Share-commerce, or marketing in the hands of community
Jan Vobořil: Limits of right to privacy for Creative Commons licences
Michał Kruk: Trolling in the intellectual property law
Łukasz Łyczkowski: Social media and the problem of copyright
Magdalena Miernik: On the legal limits of parody
20.15-20.30: closing of the conference
Friday, 07.11.2014
15.00-16.00: registration
ROOM A
16.00-16.15: opening of the conference
16.15-17.00: Birgitta Jónsdóttir: During the times of universal greed, sharing is a revolutionary act
17.00-17.15: coffee break
17.15-18.30:
Michał Boni: European „copyright” in the information society
Petros At Freelab: Kill the parasite! Intellectual Commons instead of ownership and monopolies
Anna Biernacka: Whom copyright serves
Kacper Zagadka: Self-publishing the Polish way, or the escape over the ocean
Lucie Guibault: Fair use in support of mash-ups, remixes and other transformative uses in Europe
Natalia Łukaszewicz: Patent challenges for the Maker Movement
18.30-19.00: coffee break
19.00-20.15:
Jacek Zadrożny: Copyright and accessibility – when people with disabilities can be consumers of culture
Marcin Wilkowski: Copying as a condition of digital heritage
Radek Czajka: Can culture be compatible with Free Software?
Milena Bogdanowicz: Fair use for the purpose of documentation and information
Andriy Bichuk/Maksym Naumko: Collective rights management in Ukraine – the way it should not be
Yaroslav Dytyniuk/Olexiy Gumenchuk: What happens to collective management of the rights when right holders are weak and the state is passive or what should a restaurant do when 17 organizations ask for money simultaneously?
20.15-21.00: closing of the conference
ROOM B
16.00-17.00: live broadcast from ROOM A
17.00-17.15: coffee break
17.15-18.30:
Maciej Giermak: Right to culture in the EU law
Zuzana Adamová: Culture vs Copyright
Jarosław Góra/Bartosz Pudo: Copyright trolling – don’t tease the troll and don’t be teased by one
Ewa Wojnarska-Krajewska: Data mining in the Internet and the EU reform of copyright
Jake Beaumont-Nesbitt: Funding musicians vs funding music
Kamil Jaczyński: It’s possible to sell culture, or how to benefit from creativity
18.30-19.00: coffee break
19.00-20.15:
Alex Lungu/Ioana Pelehatăi: Copy-me: A Webseries About Copying
Maira Sutton: Building a Transnational, Peer-to-Peer User Rights Movement
Marek Hojda: I earn thanks to the collective management organization
Izabela Litwin: The impact of costs linked with copyright and related rights on the price of the final product, now and in the future
Karolina Grodecka: OpenAGH – open academic e-textbooks for engineers
Mikhail Volchek: Yes, yes… we can alter copyright!
20.15-21.00: closing of the conference