copyright and moocs

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Copyright  and  MOOCsMaarten  Zeinstra  (Kennisland),  Amsterdam,  april  2015.    

mz@kl.nl  |@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

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       mz@kl.nl       @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/).

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