Copyright And Open Content (Student version)

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Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution. Produced by Karen Fasimpaur. Here are some accompanying lesson plan resources: http://tinyurl.com/5qahht and a post about my experience with this in the classroom: http://www.k12handhelds.com/blog/2008/05/kids-copyright-and-open-content.php

Transcript of Copyright And Open Content (Student version)

Copyright and Open Content

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.

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.

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.

Other Licenses

• Public domain – You can do whatever you want with it (mostly government stuff)

• GFDL (Wikipedia uses this) – Share alike license

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

Example

Credit: Bronayur, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Hershey_Pennsylvania_1.JPG

Credits

This presentation was created by Karen Fasimpaur. It is licensed under CC-BY.

Background image courtesy of MorgueFile; photo by Carlos Paes.