Creative Commons for Mountain Digital West Libraries

  • View
    406

  • Download
    0

  • Category

    Design

Preview:

DESCRIPTION

Webinar I gave to MDWL libraries and librarians.

Citation preview

Tools & Resources for Mountain West Digital Librarians & Libraries

janepark@creativecommons.org @janedaily http://schoolofopen.org http://bit.ly/commonsnews

!  Origins in Copyright !  CC Licenses & Tools !  CC + Libraries !  School of Open

We make sharing content easy, legal, and scalable.

What do we do?

All Rights Reserved

A set of exclusive rights granted to creators of

‘original works of authorship’

" Automatic ✓  All Rights Reserved ✓  Lasts a very long time ✓  Keeps getting extended

The problem:

Traditional © designed for old distribution models now

governs the Internet

In a digital world, most everyone is a creator of

copyrighted content.

Technically, it’s so easy to share!

Legally? Not so easy.

$750-$150,000 per copyright infringement

With Creative Commons, creators can grant copy and

reuse permissions in advance.

Free legal tools that express these permissions for you.

How do we do it?

"  Origins in Copyright !  CC Licenses & Tools !  CC + Libraries !  School of Open

(1) Copyright licenses

(2) Public domain tools

Free legal tools

(1) Copyright licenses

Public Domain Dedication

Licenses

All CC licenses are combinations of 4 elements:

Attribution"

ShareAlike"

NonCommercial"

NoDerivatives"

CC licenses are unique because they are expressed in three ways.

Lawyer Readable

Legal Code

Human Readable

Deed

Machine Readable Metadata

(2) Public domain tools

CC0 (read ‘CC Zero’)

Public Domain Mark

What’s the difference?

CC Zero = I want to waive all of MY rights to a work.

PD Mark = For works already in the

public domain.

creativecommons.org/publicdomain

74 jurisdictions

500 million works

" CC is built on © law " CC gives creators more

options " CC minimizes transaction

costs

Some things to remember

CC does not affect Fair Use. CC may grant permissions beyond Fair Use.

Lastly…

Who uses Creative Commons?

Wikipedia: Over 76,000 contributors working on over 31 million articles in 285 languages

How do I find and use these works?

53!

54!

Best Practices for Attribution: (TASL) " Title " Author "  Source – Link to work "  License – Name + Link http://wiki.creativecommons.org/Best_practices_for_attribution

Best Practice Example: You have assembled a textbook consisting of OER from various sources. Here’s what a credits page at the end of that textbook might look like.

"  Origins in Copyright "  CC Licenses & Tools !  CC + Libraries !  School of Open

1) CC0 for library metadata 2) Tagging resources with rights info 3) Open license for library owned content 4) Open policy for university research

65!

66!

67!

68!

1) CC0 for library metadata 2) Tagging resources with rights info 3) Open license for library owned content 4) Open policy for university research

Europeana: 30M metadata items under CC0, 5 million digital object with PDM and 2.8 million digital objects under one of the CC licenses

71!

73!

1) CC0 for library metadata 2) Tagging resources with rights info 3) Open license for library owned content 4) Open policy for university research

75!

76!

1) CC0 for library metadata 2) Tag resources with rights info 3) Open license for library owned content 4) Open policy for university research

78!

79!

1) CC0 for library metadata 2) Tagging resources with rights info 3) Open license for library owned content 4) Open policy for university research

"  Origins in Copyright "  CC Licenses & Tools "  CC + Libraries !  School of Open

http://schoolofopen.org

83!

84!

85!

86!

Except where otherwise noted, this presentation by Creative Commons is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License: http://creativecommons.org/by/4.0.

Note: Please keep in mind that Creative Commons and the double C in a circle are registered trademarks of Creative Commons in the United States and other countries. Third party marks and brands are the property of their respective holders. “fuzzy copyright” by Nancy Sims Source: https://secure.flickr.com/photos/pugno_muliebriter/1384247192/ License: CC BY-NC http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.0 Photo: �Students in Jail� Author: Judy Baxter Source: http://www.flickr.com/photos/judybaxter/501511984/in/photostream/ License: CC BY-NC-SA http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/

Attributions

slideshare.net/janeatcc

Recommended