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Category: About CC

Building the Future in 2026

About CC
Input” by Adam Pieniazek, modified by Creative Commons, is licensed via CC BY 2.0.

In 2026, Creative Commons will continue to ensure that technological change strengthens, not erodes, the commons and improves the acts of sharing and access that are part of our everyday lives. We do this by applying first principles, practical strategies, and lessons learned from decades of advancing the commons. Sharing of research, educational materials, heritage, and creative works are acts of generosity—these are the gifts people give to the commons. Access to these same shared resources enables collaboration, innovation, and understanding. Together, this is how we improve access to knowledge and build a more equitable future.  

What We Built Together in 2025

About CC
Colored swirls with the CC logo nestled between the colors.
"Kaleidoscope 2" by Sheila Sund is licensed under CC BY 2.0, remixed by Creative Commons licensed under CC BY 4.0

This year marked the first year of a new strategic cycle for Creative Commons, and it began amid profound change. The ground beneath the open internet continues to shift. Powerful technologies, driven largely by multibillion-dollar companies, are reshaping how knowledge and creativity are shared online, concentrating power in the hands of a few and testing long-standing assumptions about openness and access.

Where CC Stands on Pay-to-Crawl

Policy, Sustaining the Commons
A bird's eye view photo of an orange sand mine with transport lorries, but the image is slightly distorted by digital artefacts.
"Distorted Sand Mine" by Lone Thomasky & Bits&Bäume, licensed under CC BY 4.0.

As we’ve discussed before, the rise of large artificial intelligence (AI) models has fundamentally disrupted the social contract governing machine use of web content. Today, machines don’t just access the web to make it more searchable or to help unlock new insights; they feed algorithms that fundamentally change (and threaten) the web we know. What once functioned as a mostly reciprocal ecosystem now risks becoming extractive by default.

Integrating Choices in Open Standards: CC Signals and the RSL Standard

Licenses & Tools, Sustaining the Commons
"Studying" by Dr. Matthias Ripp, March 2022, CC BY 2.0, Flickr.

At Creative Commons, we’ve long believed that binary systems rarely reflect the complexity of the real world—nor do they serve the commons very well. The internet, like the communities that built it, thrives on nuance, experimentation, and shared stewardship. That’s why we’re continuously working to introduce choice where there has been little, and to advocate for systems that acknowledge the diversity of values and needs across the web.

Creative Commons Becomes an Official UNESCO NGO Partner

Community, Open Culture, Open Science, Press
UNESCO Headquarters in Paris, France
UNESCO © 2023 by Brigitte Vézina is licensed under CC BY 4.0

UNESCO © 2023 by Brigitte Vézina is licensed under CC BY 4.0 We are proud to announce that we are now established as an official NGO partner to UNESCO (consultative status). UNESCO stands for “United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization” and is the UN’s specialized agency that aims to foster international cooperation in the…

Welcoming New CC Board Members

About CC
New Board Members 03_2025
New Board Members 03_2025

Meet the New CC Board Members We’re pleased to introduce four new members to our Board: Alwaleed Alkhaja, Melissa Hagemann, Melissa Omino, and Colin Sullivan.  Familiar faces within the CC community, Alwaleed, Melissa, Melissa,  and Colin bring prior experience within our organization, having previously partnered with us as community advocates with a history of dedicated…