creative commons 101
Post on 11-Sep-2014
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helping createbrands for the future
All content copyright
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Creative Commons is a non-profit organization that enables to increase the amount of creativity (cultural, educational and scientific content) in the “commons” - the body of work that is available to the public for free and legal sharing, use, repurposing and remixing
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what is creative commons?
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Bloggers, journalists, webmasters, artist, educator, scientist or other creator looking for content that one can freely and legally use.
In other words, EVERYONE!IMAGE
who uses creative commons?
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A Creative Commons License is a standard way for content creators to grant someone else permission to use their work. A Creative Common License is used when an author wants to give people the right to share, use or build upon a work that they have created. It allows using the author’s work while still protecting his/her intellectual property.
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what is creative commons license?
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why use creative commons license?
Licenses help the user to attribute correctly
Licenses provide global
recognition
Licenses help to further share the
newly created work
USER CREATOR
Licenses are easy to
understand
Licenses are easy to choose
Every CC License applies
worldwide
Licenses help avoid abuse of
Intellectual Property
Licenses help to scale content
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how does creative commons license work?
CREATOR
Choose a License
Change Copyright
terms
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how does creative commons license work?
USER
Look for content that you
can freely use
Attribute the original
creator
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ATTRIBUTION (CC BY) – Others can copy, distribute, display, perform and remix your work if they credit your name as requested by you
SHAREALIKE (SA) – Others can distribute your work only under a license identical to the one you have chosen for your work
NO DERIVATIVE WORKS (ND) – Others can only copy, distribute, display or perform exact copies of your work
NON-COMMERCIAL (NC) – Others can copy, distribute, display, perform or remix your work but for non-commercial purposes only
what are the creative commons key license terms?
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The three layers of licenses ensure that the spectrum of rights is not just a legal concept. It’s something that the creators of works can understand, their users can understand, and even the Web itself can understand.
what are the three layers of creative commons licenses?
Legal Code
Machine Readabl
e
Human Readabl
e
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what are the types of creative commons licenses?
ATTRIBUTION (CC BY) – Lets one distribute, remix, tweak and build upon the original work even commercially as long as original creation credit is given
Most Free
Least Free
FOR
US
ER
ATTRIBUTION (CC BY - SA) – Lets others remix, tweak, and build upon your work even for commercial purposes, as long as they credit you and license their new creations under the identical terms. All new works based on yours will carry the same license, so any derivatives will also allow commercial use. ATTRIBUTION-NODERVIS (CC BY-ND) – Allows for redistribution, commercial and non-commercial as long as it is passed along unchanged and in whole, with credit to the original work
ATTRIBUTION-NON COMMERCIAL (CC BY-NC) – Lets one distribute, remix, tweak and build upon the original work non-commercially. The new work must acknowledge the original work but one does not have to license one’s derivative works on the same termsATTRIBUTION-NON COMMERCIAL-SHAREALIKE (CC BY-NC-SA)– Lets one distribute, remix, tweak and build upon the original work non-commercially, as long as one credits the original work and license one’s new creations under the identical termsATTRIBUTION-NON COMMERCIAL-NODERVIS (CC BY-NC-ND) – Only allows one to download the original work and share it with others as long as one credits the original work. One cannot change the original work in anyways or use it commercially.
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creative commons license summary
CC BY
CC BY - SA
CC BY - ND
CC BY - NC
CC BY – NC - SA
CC BY – NC - ND
Copy & Publish
Attribution Required
Commercial Use
Modify & Adapt
Change License
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how to attribute?
photos
There is not one correct way to attribute. One must attribute to the best of his ability using the available information
One must include:THE AUTHOR: • Name/
pseudonym/username
• Link to the author’s profile
TITLETITLE OF THE WORK: • Title of the work• Link where the
original photo is hosted
CC LICENSE TYPE: • CC License name• Link to the full license
COPYRIGHT NOTICES: • Leave notices intact
when you credit the work
• Include other parties as requested by the creator
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how to attribute?
photosExamples:
Source: http://www.dartmouth.edu/~ahrc/resources/ccattribute.html
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how to attribute?
blogsOne must include:
THE AUTHOR: • Name/pseudonym/ username• Link to the author’s profile
TITLE TITLE OF THE WORK: • Title of the work• Link to the original work
CC LICENSE TYPE: • CC License name• Link to the full license
Example:
Source: http://www.newmediarights.org/guide/how_to/creative_commons/best_practices_creative_commons_attributions
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how to attribute?
booksOne must include:
THE AUTHOR: • Name/
pseudonym/username
• Link to the author’s profile
TITLETITLE OF THE WORK: • Title of the work• Link to the original work
CC LICENSE TYPE: • CC License name• Link to the full license /
written near the author and the title if it’s a hard copy
Example:
Source: http://www.newmediarights.org/guide/how_to/creative_commons/best_practices_creative_commons_attributions
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how to attribute?
online videosOne must include:
THE AUTHOR: • Name/pseudonym/ username• Link to the author’s profile
TITLETITLE OF THE WORK: • Title of the work• Link to the original work
CC LICENSE TYPE: • CC License name• License written into
credits at end of video. Ideally make the text clickable to the original work. Put links to the original work and the license terms in the information section for the particular work (i.e. on the right in YouTube).
Source: http://www.newmediarights.org/guide/how_to/creative_commons/best_practices_creative_commons_attributions
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how to attribute?
online videosExamples:
Source: http://www.newmediarights.org/guide/how_to/creative_commons/best_practices_creative_commons_attributions, http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fDbbdeIXO0w#t=3m0s
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how to attribute?
photos / drawings / illustrationsOne must include:
THE AUTHOR: • Name/pseudonym/
username• Link to the author’s
profile
TITLE TITLE OF THE WORK: • Title of the work• Link to the original work
CC LICENSE TYPE: • CC License name• License (with link
online) or in close proximity to the tangible work (either in the border
or directly on the work, if applicable).
Source: http://www.newmediarights.org/guide/how_to/creative_commons/best_practices_creative_commons_attributions
Example:
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how to embed CC Licenses into resources?
For websites & webpages
Go to the creative commons websiteChoose the specific CC license that you require and appropriate jurisdiction, and in particular whether you wish to choose a ported license (jurisdiction specific license) or unported license (without a specified jurisdiction) Make sure that your resource contains information about authorship and contact details (such as an email address)Select the license you have chosenScroll to the bottom of the page and select ‘Use this license for your own work’Embed the html code that is given into your own website or web page that host your resource
Source: http://www.jisc.ac.uk/publications/programmerelated/2011/scaembeddingcclicencesbp.aspx?_tmc=LocbSfVWICSiFbxfEie2-BXVltG1taG7y63RZYVrLog
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how to embed CC Licenses into resources?
For blogs
Choose a license
Copy the code - On the "Mark your content" page of the license process, copy the code provided by highlighting it with your mouse and hitting ctrl-cPaste code into your Blogger Template Log into your Blogger blog, then click the Template tab to edit the code. Near the end of the template code, before you see </body></html>, paste in the code copied in the previous step by clicking the page and hitting ctrl-v (command-v on a Mac). Click "Save Template Changes" then republish your blog to add your license to your Blogger site.
Source: http://www.jisc.ac.uk/publications/programmerelated/2011/scaembeddingcclicencesbp.aspx?_tmc=LocbSfVWICSiFbxfEie2-BXVltG1taG7y63RZYVrLog
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how to embed CC Licenses into resources?
For MS Office documents (Word, Excel, Powerpoint)
Download the plug-in from Microsoft Research
Click on the ‘Creative Commons’ link in FILE
Choose the specific CC license that you require and appropriate jurisdiction, and in particular whether you wish to choose a ported license (jurisdiction specific license) or unported license (without a specified jurisdiction)
Make sure that your resource contains information about authorship and contact details (such as an email address)
Source: http://www.jisc.ac.uk/publications/programmerelated/2011/scaembeddingcclicencesbp.aspx?_tmc=LocbSfVWICSiFbxfEie2-BXVltG1taG7y63RZYVrLog
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how to embed CC Licenses into resources?
For podcasts & other audio/visual resources
Go to the creative commons website
Choose the specific CC license that you require and appropriate jurisdiction, and in particular whether you wish to choose a ported license (jurisdiction specific license) or unported license (without a specified jurisdiction) Make sure that your resource contains information about authorship and contact details (such as an email address)
Follow these instructions
You can also put the CC licence terms into any text descriptions if you are using Flickr, YouTube etc.
Source: http://www.jisc.ac.uk/publications/programmerelated/2011/scaembeddingcclicencesbp.aspx?_tmc=LocbSfVWICSiFbxfEie2-BXVltG1taG7y63RZYVrLog
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how to embed CC Licenses into resources?
For RSS and ATOM
Go to the creative commons website
Choose the specific CC license that you require and appropriate jurisdiction, and in particular whether you wish to choose a ported license (jurisdiction specific license) or unported license (without a specified jurisdiction) Make sure that your resource contains information about authorship and contact details (such as an email address)
Follow these instructions
Source: http://www.jisc.ac.uk/publications/programmerelated/2011/scaembeddingcclicencesbp.aspx?_tmc=LocbSfVWICSiFbxfEie2-BXVltG1taG7y63RZYVrLog
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There is so much creativity out there. We continuously walk towards excellence and improving our projects. Photography, fonts, music and code are perfect examples. Looking for objects and existing implementations is often quicker and more practical than creating your own. For professionals, understanding the boundaries of a license is critical; with this knowledge, one would be surprised by what is available. Understanding copyright and licenses allows us to what we are best at: BE CREATIVE!
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be creative
thank youblogworks.in
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