Presentation by Andreas Schleicher Tackling the School Absenteeism Crisis 30 ...
Csu+CCC Summit 2019: Intro to Open Licensing
1. Introduction to
Open licensing
Kelsey Smith
OER Librarian
West Hills College Lemoore
This presentation by Kelsey Smith, West Hills College Lemoore, is licensed Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International
4. ● Copyright protects the creator from other people reproducing,
copying, distributing, displaying, performing, or making
derivatives of their work
● Any form of creative expression is automatically protected by
copyright--no registration required
● Duration of copyright protection varies by country and when it
was created, but you may assume most modern works in the USA
are protected for life of the creator +70 years
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opyright
5. Copyright in a Nutshell
● You take a picture with your phone
● This picture is automatically
protected by copyright
● You do not need to
publish/post/share/register the
image in order for it to be protected
● You are the copyright holder
● Protected for 70 years after your
death
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CC0 Public Domain
6. Public Domain
“ the state of belonging or being
available to the public as a whole, and
therefore, not subject to copyright ”
-Carrie Russel
Complete Copyright: A Guide for Librarians
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7. “Uncopyrightables”
✘ Works that haven’t been fixed in a tangible form
✘ Familiar symbols or designs (★ ☺ ❤ ➔)
✘ Ideas, methods, processes
✘ US laws and court ruling
✘ US Federal Government documents
✘ Works with expired copyright/work already in the PD
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9. “Creative Commons is a global nonprofit organization
that enables sharing and reuse of creativity and
knowledge through the provision of free legal tools...
Our vision is to help others realize the full potential of
the internet.”
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Source: CC
FAQ
15. 15
What is NOT an Adaptation?
● Changes in format
○ .docx to .pdf
● Fixing minor issues
○ Spelling or punctuation
● Putting work together in a collection
○ A collection of openly licensed essays or
images
16. Just Ask!
● Not sure about whether or not something is openly
licensed?
● Want to use an openly licensed work in a way that isn’t
permitted by the selected license?
● Want to suggest a change in the license that the creator
selected?
Get in contact with the creator!
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18. Instructions for use
EDIT IN GOOGLE SLIDES
Click on the button under the presentation
preview that says "Use as Google Slides Theme".
You will get a copy of this document on your
Google Drive and will be able to edit, add or
delete slides.
You have to be signed in to your Google account.
EDIT IN POWERPOINT®
Click on the button under the presentation
preview that says "Download as PowerPoint
template". You will get a .pptx file that you can
edit in PowerPoint.
Remember to download and install the fonts used
in this presentation (you’ll find the links to the font
files needed in the Presentation design slide)
More info on how to use this template at www.slidescarnival.com/help-use-presentation-template
This template is free to use under Creative Commons Attribution license. You can keep the Credits slide or
mention SlidesCarnival and other resources used in a slide footer.
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19. Credits
Special thanks to all the people who made and released
these awesome resources for free:
✘ Presentation template by SlidesCarnival
✘ Photographs by Unsplash
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20. Presentation design
This presentation uses the following typographies:
✘ Titles: Walter Turncoat
✘ Body copy: Sniglet
You can download the fonts on these pages:
https://www.fontsquirrel.com/fonts/walter-turncoat
https://www.fontsquirrel.com/fonts/sniglet
You don’t need to keep this slide in your presentation. It’s only here to serve you as a design guide if you need to create new
slides or download the fonts to edit the presentation in PowerPoint®
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21. SlidesCarnival icons are editable shapes.
This means that you can:
● Resize them without losing quality.
● Change fill color and opacity.
Isn’t that nice? :)
Examples:
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Playing music, but not recording or writing it down
Think of an open license like an amendment to copyright--it does not get rid of copyright, but amends the protections. CC only works/operates when the work is within the scope of copyright law (can’t work on work in PD),
Retain=store copies on your computer, print and keep copies
Reuse=reusing content in a wide variety of ways (video, online, in class, website, tutorial)
Revise=adjust or modify the content itself to fit your needs (class needs, translate, update data)
Remix=combining content with other open content to create something brand new
Redistribute= sharing copies of the original or adapted content with whoever you want
attribution=giving somebody credit. All CC licenses have the BY requirement. Unless creator instructs otherwise--must attribute
share-alike=as long as they distribute any modified work on the same terms. If they want to distribute modified works under other terms, they must get your permission first.
Non commercial=may use, redistribute work for non commercial purposes only
No derivatives= you may only use and redistribute the original work only--no changes without permission
From most open to least open with the bottom two not being “OER”
CC BY=people may use work however they want even commercially and in modified form as long as attribution given to creator
CC BY SA=can use the work for any purpose even commercially and in modified form as long as they give attribution to the creator and license any adaptations under the same license terms. If you adapt the work, must also license it CC BY SA
CC BY NC= can use work for non commercial purposes only and attribution must be given
CC BY NC SA= can use for non commercial purposes only and any adaptations must be made available under the same license