copyright and moocs
TRANSCRIPT
Copyright and MOOCsMaarten Zeinstra (Kennisland), Amsterdam, april 2015.
[email protected] |@mzeinstra
The importance of OER
1. What is copyright and what are its effects on my material?
2. How can you easily find open resources?
3. How do you apply licenses?
1. What is copyright and what are its effects on my material?
Exclusive right of the maker to use and distribute a creation
Only works that are creative enough are protected by copyright.
• “I am in Amsterdam”
• ‘Hamlet’ by William Shakespeare
• ‘Shake it off’ by Taylor Swift
• Copyright law
• A doodle on a napkin
• A photo of Rembrandt’s night watch
• ‘E=MC2’ by Albert Einstein
Examples
Exceptions and limitation to copyright law do not apply
Copyright are stackable
Neighbouring rights
Publication + 70 years
• Thriller by Michael Jackson • Harry Potter books by J. K. Rowling • A Photo of Times Square in New York
Examples
Attribution
ShareAlike
NonCommercial
NoDerivatives
v
Public Domain Mark
Creative Commons 0
CC0
BY
BY
BY
BY
BY
BY
SA
SA
NC
NC
NC ND
ND
} These are sufficiently open for OER
2. Where can you find Open Resources?
maak gebruik van de resources die er zijn
• wikipedia.org
• wikimedia.org
• YouTube.com
• flickr.com
• europeana.eu
• OERcommons.org
search.creativecommons.org
1. Find reusable images of historic maps in Amsterdam
2. Find reusable material by modern poets
3. Find reusable historic sounds from the Netherlands
Examples
Reuse licensed material
&
License your OER
3. How do you apply licenses
Attribution (4.0)
• Provide the title of the work
• Provide the author of the work
• Indicate if you made any changes to the work
• Provide a link to the applicable license (important)
• Provide a source and link to that source
Achiel Aertgeerts, Koningsooikt in de oorlog, CC BY-‐SA 3.0
Where do I need to put attribution?
• Below the object you are license
• In a bibliography
• In the credits of a movie
• As a linked CC icon on your webpage
• Offline works need to provide the entire URL
Difficult questions
Why can’t I just add licenses after I created my OER?
But if I can download it, I can use it right?
I used a book to base my OER on, is that allowed?
Do I need to attribute every image? That will take to much time!
Who is the maker of this work?
Guidelines
1. start with open
2. use material that exists
3. tools, tools, tools
Thanks! Maarten Zeinstra [email protected] @mzeinstra
• public domain works: http://www.smk.dk/en/explore-‐the-‐art/free-‐download-‐of-‐artworks/
• Movie about Open Onderwijs (Why Open Education Matters) is gemaakt door David Blake en CC BY 3.0 gelicenseerd (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/legalcode) YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gJWbVt2Nc-‐I
• This webinar is licensed under a CC BY 4.0. • Maarten Zeinstra (Kennisland), Copyright and MOOCS, 2015 (CC BY 4.0
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Sources