digital storytelling workshop november 2011

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A brief introduction to how digital storytellers can use Creative Commons licenses to share their stories with the world.

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Except where otherwise noted, this work is available under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License.Copyright 2011 The Regents of the University of Michigan

November 14, 2011

http://open.umich.edu

Emily Puckett Rodgers,Open Education

CoordinatorOpen.Michigan

Office of Enabling Technologies

Digital Storytelling Workshop

“Sharing” by ben_grey

Open is going mainstream

openmi.ch/ocwc-members11

open.umich.edu/find

lib.umich.edu/license

Digital Storytelling: Share well

digital story (dig·i·tal sto·ry)A short, first person video-narrative created by combining recorded voice, still and moving images, and music or other sounds. ~storycenter.org

CC: BY philxthomas, tree

Copyright holders hold exclusive right to do and to authorize others to:

1. Reproduce the work in whole or in part2. Prepare derivative works, such as translations,

dramatizations, and musical arrangements3. Distribute copies of the work by sale, gift, rental, or loan4. Publicly perform the work5. Publicly display the work

US Copyright Act of 1976, Section 106

Standard Practice Guide: Who Holds Copyright at or in Affiliation with the University of Michigan (9/21/2011)

SCHOLARLY WORKS means works authored by FACULTY within the scope of their employment as part of or in connection with their teaching, research, or scholarship.

Common examples of SCHOLARLYWORKS include: lecture notes, case examples, course materials, textbooks, works of nonfiction, novels, lyrics, musical compositions/arrangements and recordings, journal articles, scholarly papers, poems, architectural drawings, software, visual works of art, sculpture, and other artistic creations, among others, regardless of the medium in which those works are fixed or disseminated. openmi.ch/um-spg-copyright11

Copyright: Why it Matters

youtube.com/t/copyright_owners

Digital Storytelling: Why this matters

youtube.com/t/copyright_permissions

vimeo.com/dmca

Open Licenses: Some Rights Reserved

Public Domain

least restrictive

most restrictive

All Rights Reserved

CC: BY SA NC by roserevolution Kusudama Ornaments

Sharing

Learning

Creativity

wiki.creativecommons.org/CC_video_bumpers

Digital Storytelling: BumpersAdd a “bumper” to

your video or add the license information in

the “More Info” section of the video

hosting site.

Include: license title and a URL to the

license.

Digital Storytelling: Bumpers

Examples of how to add license

information on YouTube.

Add a CC license to your content on SlideShare and YouTube.

youtube.com/t/creative_commons

Login, navigate to “edit presentation details”

Photos: Sure BetsWikimedia Commonssearch.creativecommons

.org Internet ArchiveOpenClip Art LibraryCitizendium

OERs: text, music, articles, etc.

OER Commonsdiscovered.creativecommon

s.orgOpenCourseWare FinderOER RecommenderWikiversity CCMixter and JamendoMERLOTWikimedia Commons

Search: More and more people are sharing their work, legally, so you can use it.

Advanced Search:

Google Advanced Image Search

Flickr Advanced Image Search

Open from the Start

collaboration transparency participation innovation adaptation

Bridging the Boxes… by opensourceway

The mission of the University of Michigan is to serve the people of Michigan and the world through preeminence in creating, communicating, preserving and applying knowledge, art, and academic values, and in developing leaders and citizens who will challenge the present and enrich the future.

~University of Michigan Mission

Contact: Emily Puckett RodgersOpen Education Coordinator,Open.Michigan, Office of Enabling Technologies

epuckett@umich.edu@epuckett

“Share your ideas” by britbohlinger

Connect:open.umich.eduopen.michigan@umich.edu

Facebook openmi.ch/mediafb

Twitter @open_michigan

Events Calendaropenmi.ch/om-calendar

DIY Open Digital Storytelling

• Guidelines• Tips• Resources

“3 Robots Remix” by jimyounkin CC: BY-NC-SAhttp://www.flickr.com/photos/jimyounkin/2383652/in/photostream/

“Untitled” by Erik B CC: BY-NChttp://www.flickr.com/photos/erikb/2378157/

From THIS… …to THIS

Remember: adding an open license to your work means that people can build off of it…

Creative Commons Licenseswork with the legal, technical and social world we live in.•Machine Readable: CC Rights Expression Language (CC REL)•Human Readable: Commons Deed•Legal Code: Traditional Legal Tool

Creative Commons

Edit Materials

To attribute a CC Licensed object in your materials, you use the following: 1. Author2. Source3. License

Abbreviation (e.g. CC BY)

4. License URLSee: open.umich.edu/share/cite

Phalaenopsis audreyjm529

orchis galilaea CC:BY-SA judy_breck (flickr) http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0/deed.en

Angraecum viguieri GNU free documentation orchi (wikipedia)

Judging Costumes by UMMS IT Org

More on how to attribute someone else’s work

Attributions page

Title slide: CC: Seo2 | Relativo & Absoluto (flickr) http://www.flickr.com/photos/seo2/2446816477/ | http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/deed.en

Slide 1 CC:BY-SA Jot Powers (wikimedia commons) http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Bounty_hunter_2.JPG | http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0/

Slide 2 CC: BY-NC Brent and MariLynn (flickr) http://www.flickr.com/photos/brent_nashville/2960420853/ | http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.0/deed.en

Slide 3 http://www.newvideo.com/productdetail.html?productid=NV-AAE-71919

Slide 4 Public Domain: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Hummer-H3.JPG

Slide 5 Source: Undetermined from a variety of searches on Monster Truck Documentary

Slide 6 Source: Mega-RC.com http://www.mega-rc.com/MRCImages/Asscd_Mnstr_GT_ShockOPT.jpg

Slide 7 CC:BY-NC GregRob (flickr)

Tips: You can use the CC icon, the words, or an abbreviation of the license. You can also hyperlink to the sources. You can create an “attributions page” at the end of your presentation, like a works cited page. See: open.umich.edu/share/cite

Use: Public Domain

Use content when it is clearly indicated or known that the content object is in the public domain. For example, a book published in the U.S. before 1923, such as Gray's Anatomy, is the public domain.

Relevant citation tags:

More Information: lib.umich.edu/copyright/using-copyrighted-material

Use: PermissionUse content you have been given expressed permission to use.

This action is appropriate when the object is licensed under Creative Commons or the the object was created by someone else who gave special permission for it to be used.

• Relevant citation tags:

CC: BY-SA, by opensourceway, http://www.flickr.com/photos/opensourceway/4371000710/in/set-72157623343017387/

Public Domain b/c Ineligible for © OR Fair Use Determination

When you come across an object for copyright status or permission is unknown, but you have reason to believe that it is legally acceptable to use it anyway.

For example, if the object is something that is ineligible for copyright, e.g. a table of facts is not protected by copyright in the U.S., or it is a short excerpt of a much larger copyrighted work, then you would select this action.

Since the category of what's eligible for copyright, particularly in regard to data and scientific images differs across countries, open content producers should refrain from doing this sort of copyright analysis unless that have a deep understanding of copyright law in their country and/or are able to consult copyright attorneys trained in their jurisdiction.

Relevant citation tags:

Use: Copyright Analysis

See Open.Michigan’s Casebook for more information and legal context:open.umich.edu/wiki/Casebook

“Spinach is Good” Center for Disease Control

rejon http://openclipart.org/media/files/rejon/11221

Life Magazine. January 17, 1938

Some commentary about how spinach, an outline of a male, and this cover of Life Magazine from 1938 is related in the context of this presentation.

(Same format for CC Zero tag as the PD-SELF tag)

Example of when it may be appropriate to claim “Fair Use” of content.

Open.Michigan Resources:

1. How to create and use open content2. How to identify copyrighted content 3. Tools to use to create open content

External Organizations:

1. Creative Commons2. Participatory Culture Foundation3. Open Video Alliance

“Another hat toss picture” David Michael Morris

University of Michigan’s Copyright Office:

lib.umich.edu/copyright

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