Copyright And Open Content (Student version)

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Copyright And Open Content (Student version) - Presentation Transcript

  1. Copyright and Open Content
  2. How much do you know?
    • If you have drawn a picture, written a song, or taken a photo, you own the copyright (even if you don’t put a © symbol on it).
    • True or false?
    • If you have drawn a picture, written a song, or taken a photo, you own the copyright (even if you don’t put a © symbol on it).
    • True
    • You can use a picture from the Internet legally in something you’re going to publish online.
    • True or false?
    • You can use a picture from the Internet legally in something you’re going to publish online.
    • False
    • What do you have to do legally to use a copyrighted work in something you’re going to post to the Internet?
    • a. Copy and paste it.
    • b. Cite the source.
    • c. Get the creator’s permission.
    • d. Nothing
    • What do you have to do legally to use a copyrighted work in something you’re going to post to the Internet?
    • c. Get the creator’s permission.
    • How long does copyright last?
    • a. 10 years
    • b. 50 years
    • c. the life of the creator
    • d. the life of the creator + 70 years
    • How long does copyright last?
    • d. the life of the creator + 70 years
    • You can’t legally use anything copyrighted without contacting the creator and getting permission.
    • True or false?
    • You can’t legally use anything copyrighted without contacting the creator and getting permission.
    • Usually true, but not always…
    • There is a way for creators to give you permission to share without you having to ask.
    • Someone who owns a copyrighted work can choose to share by licensing their work under Creative Commons .
  3. Some examples
    • The Beastie Boys, Nine Inch Nails, and others have licensed music under Creative Commons.
    • Everyone who adds things to Wikipedia agrees to share it under a “some rights reserved” license.
    • Some people are writing open licensed textbooks. These could save college students thousands of dollars.
  4. CC BY – You can use however you want; just cite the source. CC BY SA – You can use however you want, but you must cite the source AND license your work under a sharing license. CC BY ND – You can use the work but you can’t change it or put it into a bigger work; also cite the source. CC BY NC – You can use only if it is noncommercial (you can’t charge $); cite the source.
  5. Other Licenses
    • Public domain – You can do whatever you want with it (mostly government stuff)
    • GFDL (Wikipedia uses this) – Share alike license
  6. Try it
    • Find an open-licensed image
      • www.wikipedia.org
      • www.openphoto.net
      • www.morguefile.com
      • www.sxc.hu
      • www.wpclipart.com
    • Copy and paste the photo into a document and site the source by writing a credit line
  7. Example
    • Credit: Bronayur, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Hershey_Pennsylvania_1.JPG
  8. Credits
    • This presentation was created by Karen Fasimpaur. It is licensed under CC-BY.
    • Background image courtesy of MorgueFile; photo by Carlos Paes.

+ Karen FKaren F, 2 years ago

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