U.K. residents (but not the rest of us) can now download
80 notable packages of news footage from the BBC archives, the AP reported. For instance, they can watch
the Berlin Wall come down in Windows Media, Quicktime or MPEG-1 formats, and then edit the footage and use it for noncommercial purposes, giving credit. The few restrictions are laid out in the
Creative Archive License, which requires users to share their derivative works under the same terms. Channel 4, the British Film Institute and the Open University will issue material under the same license, the BBC said. The Open News Archive was
proposed in 2003 by Greg Dyke, then head of the Beeb.
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