For an educational audience. A very basic overview of copyright, creative commons, and the public domain. What each one means, how to determine what Fair Use is, and how to locate works you don't need permission to re-use!
9. Is it Fair Use? (this is not a Yes/No question)
A. Is the use done for a “transformative” purpose?
B. How do the Four Factors measure?
1. the purpose & character of the use (non-commercial is good)
2. the nature of the copyrighted work (purely factual works are
more likely to be Fair Use than creative works)
3. the amount and subtantiality of the work
4. the effect of the use of the work on the market
http://fairuse.stanford.edu/Copyright_and_Fair_Use_Overview/chapter9/9-a.html#1
11. the spectrum of rights
c
Copyright
cc
Creative Commons Public Domain
All Rights Reserved Some Rights Reserved No Rights Reserved
• Re-use requires the • Re-use is permitted without • May be used without
permission from the permission under the permission.
copyright owner. specifications shared
in the license.
12. • Licenses that define the spectrum of possibilities between copyright
and the public domain.
• Retain your copyright while allowing certain uses of your right, as
prescribed in the license you choose.
13. Attribution
Others can copy, distribute, display, perform, or remix the work if the author’s
name is credited as specified.
Non-Commercial
Others can copy, distribute, display, perform or remix the work but for non-
commercial purposes only.
No Derivative Works
Others can copy, distribute, display, or perform verbatim copies of the work.
Share Alike
Others can copy, distribute, display, or perform the work only under a license
identical to the one the work is shared under.
14. • Use the “Advanced Image Search” feature of Flickr at:
http://www.flickr.com/search/advanced
• Enter your key terms in the search box
• Scroll to the bottom and check the box next to “Only
search within Creative Commons-licensed content”
• Click “Search”
15.
16. To re-use this image without
permission, you must:
• Attribute the author.
• Use for non-commercial
purposes.
• Use the image as is.
By: Martin Sercombe CC-BY-NC-ND
17. Search for other types of
CC-licensed media at:
http://search.creativecommons.org/