"Creative Commons licensing: application, search and attribution", presented by Professor Anne Fitzgerald at Museums Australia National Conference, Canberra, 17 May 2013
Creative Commons licensing: application, search and attribution (2013)
1. Professor Anne Fitzgerald
Queensland University of Technology
Creative Commons Australia
Museums Australia National Conference
National Museum of Australia
Canberra
17 May 2013
2. How to…
(1) Use CC licensed content:
a) Find CC licensed content
b) Attribute CC licensed content
(2) Apply a CC licence to your content
(3) Practical examples
3.
4. Attribution (BY)
Copyright notice - Keep notices that refer to the
Licence or Disclaimers
Name of author and other Attribution parties
Source and Title of the work
Licence URL/hyperlink
In a Derivative Work, identify the changes made to the
original
No suggestion of endorsement
“In a manner reasonable to the medium you are using”
5. Attribution
1. Title of Work (if provided)
2. Creator’s Name or Other Attribution
Parties
3. Source of Work (URL/hyperlink)
4. Copyright Notice, Licence
(URL/hyperlink)
5. Changes to the source work (if any)
7. Attribution
Who is the author/creator?
What CC licence is it available
under?
What is the name of the work?
What changes have been made?
Where can you find it?
8. Attribution
• “In a manner reasonable to the medium you
are using”
If you were the copyright owner, how would you wish
to be attributed?
13. Attribution
Image: crop of SparkFun by Jared Tarbell
<http://www.flickr.com/photos/35468148654@N01
/509789392> available under Creative Commons
Attribution (CC BY) 2.0 Generic licence
<http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/dee
d.en>.
14. *Who+ Creator’s name
Image: crop of SparkFun by Jared Tarbell
<http://www.flickr.com/photos/35468148654@N01
/509789392> available under Creative Commons
Attribution (CC BY) 2.0 Generic licence
<http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/dee
d.en>.
15. [What] Licence + URL
Image: crop of SparkFun by Jared Tarbell
<http://www.flickr.com/photos/35468148654@N01
/509789392> available under Creative Commons
Attribution (CC BY) 2.0 Generic licence
<http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/dee
d.en>.
16. [What] Title
Image: crop of SparkFun by Jared Tarbell
<http://www.flickr.com/photos/35468148654@N01
/509789392> available under Creative Commons
Attribution (CC BY) 2.0 Generic licence
<http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/dee
d.en>.
17. [What] Changes
Image: crop of SparkFun by Jared Tarbell
<http://www.flickr.com/photos/35468148654@N01
/509789392> available under Creative Commons
Attribution (CC BY) 2.0 Generic licence
<http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/dee
d.en>.
18. [Where] Source of work (URL)
Image: crop of SparkFun by Jared Tarbell
<http://www.flickr.com/photos/35468148654@N01
/509789392> available under Creative Commons
Attribution (CC BY) 2.0 Generic licence
<http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/dee
d.en>.
23. What Licence + URL
What title
Who’s the licensor
Where to find
24.
25.
26.
27. Creative Commons, The Power of Open, available at http://thepowerofopen.org/, licensed under CC
BY, http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/.
Find CC licensed material
43. Vimeo
http://vimeo.com/search
YouTube
http://www.youtube.com/editor
Generic 2.0 ‘Afghan Air Force and Afghan National Army Combine Combat Training Exercises’ by isafmedia , http://www.flickr.com/photos/29456680@N06/5413482056
Video
56. Website copyright policies/
licensing statements
Unless otherwise specified …
Except for third party material …
… content on this website is licensed under a Creative
Commons Attribution 3.0 Australia licence.
Content that does not originate from Joe Bloggs does
not fall within the scope of this licence.
Best practice – CC badge on each individual item
82. Generic 2.0 Andy in the VAB by adactio, http://flickr.com/adactio/301112397
83.
84. CC BY SA
Most of Wikipedia's text and many of its images are dual-
licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-
Sharealike 3.0 Unported License (CC-BY-SA) and the GNU
Free Documentation License (GFDL)
The small print:
“ Text is available under the Creative Commons
Attribution-Share Alike License; additional terms
may apply. See Terms of Use for details ....”
Information for text contributors to Wikimedia
projects
To grow the commons of free knowledge and free
culture, all users contributing to Wikimedia projects are
required to grant broad permissions to the general public
to re-distribute and re-use their contributions freely, as
long as the use is attributed and the same freedom to re-
use and re-distribute applies to any derivative works.
Therefore, for any text you hold the copyright
to, by submitting it, you agree to license it under
the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike
3.0 Unported License. For compatibility reasons, you
are also required to license it under the GNU Free
Documentation License. Re-users can choose the license(s)
they wish to comply with. Please note that these licenses
do allow commercial uses of your
contributions, as long as such uses are compliant
with the terms.
As an author, you agree to be attributed in any of the
following fashions: a) through a hyperlink (where possible)
or URL to the article or articles you contributed to, b)
through a hyperlink (where possible) or URL to an
alternative, stable online copy which is freely
accessible, which conforms with the license, and which
provides credit to the authors in a manner equivalent to
the credit given on this website, or c) through a list of all
authors. (Any list of authors may be filtered to exclude very
small or irrelevant contributions.)
95. Queensland GovernmentData
http://data.qld.gov.au/dataset - links to Open
Knowledge Definition (just a definition – not a
licence)
https://www.qld.gov.au/legal/copyright/ - have to
scroll down to footer “copyright” page to find CC
information
Compare: http://data.govt.nz/catalog/
102. CC is a tool
Standardised
Copyright license
Free to use
Now you know how to use it!
103. • More examples of how CC is being used:
• http://wiki.creativecommons.org/Case_Studies
• Other resources (fact sheets etc.):
http://wiki.creativecommons.org/Documentation
• On business models, see further Cheryl Foong, “Sharing with
Creative Commons: a business model for content creators” (2010)
Platform: Journal of Media and Communication 64, available at
http://eprints.qut.edu.au/40800/
• My publications are available at
http://eprints.qut.edu.au/view/person/Foong,_Cheryl.html)
Notes de l'éditeur
CC BY 3.0 Au Legal Code: 4B Attribution and Notice Requirementsa. When You Distribute or publicly perform the Work or any Derivative Work or Collection You must keep intact all copyright notices for the Work.b. When You Distribute or publicly perform the Work or any Derivative Work or Collection You must provide, in a manner reasonable to the medium or means You are using: i. the name or pseudonym (if provided) of the Original Author and/or of any other party (such as a sponsor institute, publishing entity or journal) that the Original Author or Licensor has requested be attributed (such as in the copyright notice or terms of use). In this clause 4B these parties are referred to as "Attribution Parties";ii. the title of the Work (if provided); andiii. to the extent reasonably practicable, any Uniform Resource Identifier (such as a web link) that the Licensor specifies should be associated with the Work that refers to the copyright notice or licensing information for the Work.c. For any Derivative Work You Distribute or publicly perform, You must take reasonable steps to clearly identify that changes were made to the Work. For example, a translation could be marked "The original work was translated from English to Spanish".
See Kay Kremerskothen, ‘6,000,000,000’, Flickr Blog, 4 August 2011, available at http://blog.flickr.net/en/2011/08/04/6000000000/. See Kay Kremerskothen, ‘200 million Creative Commons photos and counting!’, Flickr Blog, 5 October 2011, available at http://blog.flickr.net/en/2011/10/05/200-million-creative-commons-photos-and-counting/
1 - Link to the licence There is no link to the CC BY-NC-SA licence. Providing a direct link to, for e.g., http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/au/ means that the licence terms are just one click away. I note that this comment would also apply to your social media policy at http://www.justice.vic.gov.au/home/about+us/our+values+and+behaviours/social+media+policy/ - your reference to the CC BY-NC-SA 3.0 unported licence does not have a link to the licence. I would also note that the Australian version of the licence, as opposed to the unported licence, would be more suitable for an Australian department or agency as it is drafted in accordance with Australian law. 2 - Ability to Download and Visual only licensed under CC It appears from your licensing statement that only the visual aspects of the video are CC licensed. The video, however, appears to be on YouTube only. The YouTube platform does not readily allow downloads, which makes it difficult for someone who wishes to use the visual aspects of the video in accordance with the licence. Perhaps you could provide a download link to the video (minus the audio) and license this file under CC.
For more see http://www.stuckincustoms.com/2013/01/24/im-not-a-reader-sydney-morning-herald/http://mumbrella.com.au/smh-accused-of-breaching-photographers-copyright-135644