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Rebecca Ross

Director of Strategic Communications

Rebecca is the Director of Strategic Communications and leads all work in communications for CC. Rebecca also guides the strategic planning and implementation process for CC, recognizing the deep connection between CC’s strategic approach and external communications.

Prior to joining Creative Commons, Rebecca led the strategy and engagement portfolios at a national academic library association. She has also held executive communication roles within the academic publishing and open infrastructure sectors. Rebecca has been leading open access initiatives for over ten years and has had the opportunity to contribute to the growth of open access not-for-profit publishing and library strategic investments in open. Rebecca is a trained librarian with a MIS from the University of Ottawa.

Rebecca lives in the forest in Chelsea, Quebec, Canada with her partner, two dogs, Henry and Daphne, and Christopher the cat.

Photo of Rebecca Ross

Posts by Rebecca Ross

AI’s Infrastructure Era: Reflections from the AI Impact Summit in Delhi

Policy

Last month, we published a preview of what we intended to bring to the AI Impact Summit in Delhi: a focus on data governance, shared infrastructure, and democratic approaches to AI that genuinely advance the public interest rather than replicate existing power imbalances. That piece outlined our core interventions and the principles that have guided our thinking as we grapple with how to ensure openness, agency, and equity in the age of AI. 

CC Licenses, Data Governance, and the African Context: Conversations and Perspectives

Licenses & Tools

Over the past year,  we’ve been engaged in a series of conversations with a small group of researchers specializing in IP, AI policy, and data governance about what CC  licensing means—and does—in African contexts today. What started as an organic exchange in various spaces has revealed something larger: a strong appetite to move these conversations into the open. At stake are not only questions about CC licenses but deeper issues of data sovereignty, equity, governance, and power in global knowledge systems.