This document provides an overview of open educational resources (OER) and Creative Commons licenses. It defines OER as educational materials released under an open copyright license rather than traditional all-rights-reserved copyright. Creative Commons licenses allow users clear legal rights to update, remix, share, and post works online. The document reviews copyright basics, the six main Creative Commons license types, and how to properly attribute and adapt works with these licenses.
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This presentation discusses how copyright law and Creative Commons licenses allow Open Educational Materials to be created, remixed and shared. It also addresses what policy steps can be taken to support OER adoption
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Presentation on Creative Commons licences, providing an overview of the features of the version 4.0 international Creative Commons licences, as well as examples of the adoption of CC licensing in Australia and in other countries
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This presentation discusses how copyright law and Creative Commons licenses allow Open Educational Materials to be created, remixed and shared. It also addresses what policy steps can be taken to support OER adoption
Creative Commons Update Seminar, State Library, Brisbane, 18 July 2014 - Anne...ccAustralia
Presentation on Creative Commons licences, providing an overview of the features of the version 4.0 international Creative Commons licences, as well as examples of the adoption of CC licensing in Australia and in other countries
This PowerPoint slide is about copyright and creative commons. A simple but understanding slide for students to know what the basic differences are and how to use them under certain conditions to ensure that they do not infringe the legal rights.
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This session will cover :
• What are Open Educational Resources (OER)
• How are they the same as traditional teaching and learning materials?
• What makes them different?
• Copyright basics
• How Creative Commons licenses work
• Advantages of CC licenses
• Where OER are they being used and places to find resources
• FAQ
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Slide 8 contains a link to a highly educational video on Creative Commons.
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- Case studies
- How to find CC licensed material
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This PowerPoint slide is about copyright and creative commons. A simple but understanding slide for students to know what the basic differences are and how to use them under certain conditions to ensure that they do not infringe the legal rights.
Introduction to Creative Commons. Covers tension with internet and copyright law, the CTEA, Eldred Vs. Ashcrosft, Creative Commons organization, CC Licenses, and the CC global network
ASTE Open Educational Resources, Copyright & Creative CommonsMeredith Jacob
This session will cover :
• What are Open Educational Resources (OER)
• How are they the same as traditional teaching and learning materials?
• What makes them different?
• Copyright basics
• How Creative Commons licenses work
• Advantages of CC licenses
• Where OER are they being used and places to find resources
• FAQ
Getting unCommonly Creative: Reusing and creating open materialsGaz Johnson
These are the slides from a lunchtime briefing session for academics about Creative Commons open licenses.
Slide 8 contains a link to a highly educational video on Creative Commons.
Lecture delivered at School of Journalism and Communication, University of Queensland, St Lucia, Brisbane, 27 August 2012.
It covers:
- Copyright basics
- What Creative Commons (CC) is
- Case studies
- How to find CC licensed material
- How to attribute CC licensed material
Seminar on CC and the Future of Education at Ed Lab, ColumbiaJane Park
In this seminar, I gave a basic overview of CC: who it is, how/why it happened, and what CC does, particularly in the education field. I also talked about changing the social landscape of education, and how CC will play a role in the future of (open) education.
How to Commit a Legal Rip-off: Creative CommonsAnne Arendt
In order to not be plagiarizing materials, we need to ensure adequate copyright release and attribution for resources we use inside and outside the classroom. This presentation, instead of focusing on copyright issues and limitations, will focus on items placed in whole or in part into the public domain.
CC at Social Media Art Camp (SMartCAMP)guest5e12482
I gave a talk yesterday on Creative Commons at Social Media Art Camp (SMartCAMP) which also ustreamed live at http://www.ustream.tv/recorded/5261313. It is ideal for those who are artist creators and/or part of arts organizations/projects/institutions.
Presented by Dr. Sanjaya Mishra , Education Specialist, eLearning, COL and Principal Investigator, ROER4D Project at the Workshop on OER for Development supported by IDRC, Canada
Copyright & Creative Commons: with regards to Open Educational Resources (OER) ROER4D
Presentation: Copyright & Creative Commons: with regards to Open Educational Resources (OER). By: Glenda Cox
Delivered at the University of South Africa (UNISA) on 18 March 2015
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In this web presentation for the Library Publishing Coalition, we will cover OER, Creative Commons, and copyright basics, as well as discussing considerations for publishing openly licensed materials
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This presentation will address everything you need to know about the relationship between copyright and open access, author’s rights, how to navigate creative commons licenses and publisher contracts and when to seek permission for using copyrighted works in research.
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GoOpen Digital Roundtable Creative Commons Licenses, Copyright and OER
1. COPYRIGHT, OPEN LICENSING &
CREATIVE COMMONS LICENSES
Meredith Jacob
Bilan Jama
Creative Commons United States
American University Washington College of Law
Except where noted, all slides licensed CC-BY
4.0 by Creative Commons United States
2. • Introduction
• OER CC licenses Copyright
• Copyright Basics
• Creative Commons Licenses
• Using OER
• Authoring OER
• Questions
WHAT WE’LL COVER
3. Open Educational Resources (OER) are
educational materials that are released
under an open copyright license, rather than
under traditional all rights reserved
copyright.
OER
4. Just like traditional teaching materials, OER
can be:
• Textbooks
• Articles
• Slides
• Images
• Videos
• Simulations
In print or digital formats (or dance or song,
etc!)
CC LICENSE ON ALL TYPES
OF WORKS
5. Unlike traditional educational materials, OER
have been released under an open copyright
license that allows users to:
• Update and remix
• Translate
• Share new versions
• Post online
With clear legal rights rather than tolerated (or
private) use
FORMAL VS. TOLERATED
USES OF COPYRIGHTED WORKS
6. The purpose of copyright in the United
States draws from Art. 1 Sec. 8, Clause 8,
where it states that Congress shall have the
power:
“to promote the progress of science and the
useful art, by securing for authors and
inventors the exclusive right to their
respective writings and discoveries”
WHAT IS THE PURPOSE OF
COPYRIGHT?
7. Copyright is intended to incentivize authors
(and other creators) to write and to invest in
making new creative works.
This view of copyright exists in the United
States and other common law countries that
draw from British legal tradition
COPYRIGHT IS INTENDED TO
INCENTIVIZE AUTHORS
8. Copyright law grants to the author or copyright
owner the exclusive right to:
• reproduce, make derivatives of, sell,
distribute to the public, perform or display
publicly, the copyrighted work,
• subject to fair use and other limitations and
exceptions to copyright law.
Copyright owners may assign all the rights in
their copyright, or give limited licenses that
allow others to make specific use of their
works.
WHAT IS COPYRIGHT?
9. Copyright law applies to intellectual property that are
“original works of authorship.”
• Common types of works protected by copyright
include literary, artistic, and musical works.
• Copyright is automatic, so it applies as soon as
the work has been created.
Copyright protection in the United States lasts for the
life of the author plus 70 years or 95 years for an
institutional author. After this time period has expired,
works fall into the public domain and are free from
copyright restrictions.
WHAT DOES COPYRIGHT
PROTECT?
10. There are a number of exceptions and
limitations to copyright.
Functional concepts, names, and logos are
typically covered by patent or trademark law,
if protected at all, rather than copyright.
Copyright protects the specific expression of
a work - the words - but not the underlying
idea.
ARE THERE LIMITS TO WHAT
COPYRIGHT PROTECTS?
12. Ok, something. But not much. You just
have to fix your work in a tangible medium.
So you have to write it down, or take a
picture, or save it to electronic memory.
Then that’s it. Nothing to register, nothing to
file. You work just has to exist in a
permanent way that can be perceived by
others.
WHAT DO YOU HAVE TO DO TO
GET A COPYRIGHT?
13. The public domain contains works that are
copyrightable, but are not currently protected
by copyright. These include:
• Works where the copyright has expired
• Works that are in the public domain because
of statute, such as works that are created by
US federal employees in the course of their
employment
• Works dedicated to the public domain via
CC0
THE PUBLIC DOMAIN
14. Fair use allows the use of a copyrighted work
without permission from the copyright holder
under specific circumstances.
News reporting, teaching, and parody are all
examples of uses that could qualify as fair use.
Fair use is evaluated on a case-by-case basis,
and considers the purpose of the use, how
much of the original work is used, and how it
impacts the market for the original work.
WHAT ABOUT FAIR USE?
15. COPYRIGHT EVALUATION
Currently
protected by
Copyright Law?
YES
Fair use or other
copyright
limitation?
Creative
Commons
Licensed
Insitutional
license or
subscription
Allowed free
classroom use
(not open license)
NO
Public Domain
Idea (not
expression)
16. • Works within the copyright system
• Author still holds copyright to the work
• Traditional licenses are one to one
(negotiated)
• Open licenses like the Creative Commons
licenses are one to the public/one to many
WHAT IS AN OPEN LICENSE?
17. Advantages
• Takes advantage digital distribution and
authorship
• Ability to improve, remix, and translate
• Makes informal reuse formally permissible
(and possible on the open internet)
WHAT ARE THE ADVANTAGES OF
AN OPEN LICENSE?
18. • Clearly communicates to the public that
the resource is free to reuse
• Grants the public a license to access,
reproduce, publicly perform, publicly
display, adapt, distribute, and otherwise
use for any purposes
• provided that the licensee gives attribution
to the designated authors of the
intellectual property.
WHAT DOES A CREATIVE
COMMONS LICENSE DO?
25. BY – Attribution
• Shared by all the license
• In the place that copyright notice is
normally given
• As requested by the author
LICENSE TERMS
26. Open Educational Resources and Creative
Commons Licenses by Meredith Jacob,
slideshare.net/Meredith Jacob under a
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License
(CC BY)
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
ATTRIBUTION EXAMPLE
27. SA – Share Alike
• Any new derivative work must be released
under the same license
– Is there a derivative work?
– Is it possible to use a single license?
LICENSE TERMS
28. When you reuse materials in combination,
you have to decide if you are creating an
adaptation.
Things that are an adaptation
- A remix that contains segments of content
combined into a new work
- Edited and/or combined images
REUSING AND REMIXING
OER
29. When you reuse materials in combination,
you have to decide if you are creating an
adaptation.
Things that are generally not an adaptation:
- A compilation or playlist of content and
excerpts from content
- Setting unedited images for illustration
along side narrative text
REUSING AND REMIXING
OER
30. “Explaining ND Licenses with Steampunk Space Rhinos” by Meredith Jacob under a CC BY 4.0 License. Original
mages used in clockwise order from upper right are (1) “Cable Green” by David Kidler from Flickr under a CC By
2.0 License (2)”Hubble Views ‘Third Kind’ of Galaxy” by NASA Goddard Space Flight Center from Flickr under a CC
By 2.0 License (3) “View of the Americas on 12.13.14” by NASA Goddard Space Flight Center from Flickr under a
CC By 2.0 License (4)”A unicorn with curves?” by Mark Gunn from Flickr under a CC By 2.0 License ”Look to the
Stars” by davidd from Flickr under a CC By 2.0 License. Original images were re-sized, color-altered and
stamped with the CC logo to create this new work.
THIS IS DEFINITELY AN
ADAPTATION
31. NC – Non Commercial
• Not directed primarily towards commercial
purpose
• Does not depend on the status of the user
LICENSE TERMS - NC
32. ND – No Derivatives
• The license does not allow users to make
derivatives
• Does not apply to setting images
alongside text (including resizing)
LICENSE TERMS - ND