Copyright Free Images & Resources
Finding, Storing, Using
In this session
• Creative Commons – what is it and how can you identify whether a resource is creative commons?
• Where can I find resources to use for teaching?
• What sort of attribution is needed?
• How do I store and access resources efficiently?
QuizQ How much of a book can you copy & give out to
students?
A 10% or 1 chapter (not whichever is greater)
Q Is this free or does it need to be paid for?
A It needs to be paid for – the education sector paid over $85 million nationally last financial year
Q Is it permissible to download videos from YouTube?
A No. They clearly state on their site that this is a breach. You can link to resources, but you cannot download.
Q Can you include pre-recorded music with powerpoints?
A Yes, if it is for teaching, if it is a short extract and if it does not damage the rights of the copyright owner.
Recap copyright• Legal means by which creators control the use of their work
• Does not protect ideas
• Is automatic. There is no copyright registration process.
• Protects:artistic, literary, musical & dramatic works
films, sound recordings, broadcasts & published editions (eg. photographs, crosswords, text, diagrams)
• Duration varies depending on the work.books, music and drawings = 70 years from the death of the author;
films & sound recordings = 70 years from year of first publication.
Work created by an employee as part of their employment (eg. a teacher writes teaching materials) copyright in the work is owned by their employer
Image: Me too / Ich auch by alles-schlumpf, flickr.com accessed 29 June 2010
Do you need permission to use material?...
Can you see that:• the material been made available to
use for free for educational purposes?• there is a free use copyright
exception?• there is a statutory or voluntary
licence?
Check by looking for copyright statements on the work or the website etc
Image: Start/Stop by Compound Eye on Flickr.com retrieved 29 June 2010
Free for Education
Still need to acknowledge
the source
No 10% Rule
No Royalties Charged
Free for Education
Material
Using free resourcesPhoto of Eiffel Tower
taken from www.smh.com.au this would be counted for a royalty payment by CAL
Photo of Eiffel Tower taken from Flickr under a Creative Commons licence - this would NOT be counted for a royalty payment
Image: Eiffel Tower at night 7 by Simon & Vicki on Flickr.com accessed 29 June 2010
Symbols and meaning
Creative Commons: public licensing systemThere are 4 primary licence elements:
Attribution – attribute the author
Non-commercial – no commercial use
No Derivative Works – no remixing
ShareAlike – remix only if you let others remix
There are others, too
You may also hear of/see Copyleft
This is a form of licensing that uses existing laws to ensure works remain free for use. It mainly relates to software, but doesn’t have to – an example is GNU General Public License
Image: Brave New GNU icon from http://www.fsfe.org/projects/bgw/brave-gnu-world-logo-sm.jpg accessed 29 JUne 2010
Archive.org http://www.archive.org/index.php Originally an archive of internet sites, now a way of searching for images films & other CC content
Creative Commons Search http://search.creativecommons.org/ meta-search of other sites, can search by license type, check to make sure content really is CC before use
Google http://www.google.com/ use the advanced search to limit to CC content
Nursing & Allied Health http://sites.google.com/site/nahrsnursingresources/Home a wide range of teaching resources for health
Compfight http://www.compfight.com/ Searches Flickr with an easy CC filter
Copyright friendly http://copyrightfriendly.wikispaces.com/ a wiki and a directory of links, well organised and comprehensive
Where do I get it? Helping you to find what you need
Where do I get it?Images
Flickr http://www.flickr.com/ Use advanced search to limit to creative commons
Animal Photos http://animalphotos.info/a/ Is what it says – all content CC
Carpictures http://carpictures.cc/cars/photo/ As above – all content CC
Creativity103 http://creativity103.com/ These are fabulous CC images including photos, abstract designs etc
Picture Australia http://www.pictureaustralia.org/ Not all CC, but attribution clear & ownership clearly stated
Library of Congress Prints & Photographs http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/index.html Free for education collection from the US’s national library, includes historic posters & architectural drawings
Where do I get it?More image sites
Art Images for College Teaching http://arthist.cla.umn.edu/aict/index.html CC collection of images of art from ancient to modern to non-western, each image accompanied by references to art textbook pages
US Air Force Photos http://www.af.mil/photos/index.asp public domain images, searchable or browse by categories including public disasters, deployment, environment etc
Public health image library http://phil.cdc.gov/Phil/home.asp from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention - searchable database of images, multimedia and video files
US Department of Agriculture http://www.ars.usda.gov/is/graphics/photos/ public domain images for re-use, includes images of labs and science
Where do I get it?Videos, digitised film
Entertainment Magazine’s Free Movies http://www.emol.org/movies/ 100s of public domain movies to download, you can take clips from these to use once you have downloaded the file
Open Video Project http://www.open-video.org/index.php Digitised video for download, much educational & documentary/US government sources, browse categories are clear & useful, CC rights are clearly indicated for each piece
US National Archives http://www.youtube.com/usnationalarchives US government archive via a YouTube channel
Teacher’s Domain http://www.teachersdomain.org/ Need to register (free), but then get access to a broad selection of quality educational videos to download & re-use
Teacher Tube http://www.teachertube.com/ YouTube for educational purposes, and with the ability to download. Has audio & photos as well as video
Research Channel http://www.researchchannel.org/prog/ CC videos for streaming or download from UQ universities & research centres
Where do I get it?Sounds, music
A lot of the sound resource sites are blocked at SBIT as they fall in the category of media sharing or streaming, the pages listed here can be accessed on campus.
The free sound project http://www.freesound.org/ no music, but good audio files
Jamendo http://www.jamendo.com/en/ whole albums of music, uploaded by artists for CC use
Find Sounds http://www.findsounds.com/ CC searchable sound effects clips etc
30+ Places to find Creative Commons Media http://www.sitepoint.com/blogs/2009/04/30/30-creative-commons-sources/ there are music and audio sources given here that you will not be able to access on site, I have evaluated some at home & found that there are some worth pursuing, but you’ll need to look at them at home
Where do I get it?Information, text and more
Unearth travel http://www.unearthtravel.com/ The images on the site are rights reserved, but the editable text is CC (that is the text submitted by members)
Wisdom Commons http://www.wisdomcommons.org/ Poems, stories, folk tales etc all CC
Wikihow http://www.wikihow.com/Main-Page CC text of step by step instructions with images
NASA http://www.nasa.gov/multimedia/index.html images, vodcasts, 3D modelling all public domain for downloading & sharing
Labelling – attributing what you found
• If you publish your own material, label it in the footer of each page with the copyright symbol, name of organisation and year of publication.
For example: © State of Queensland (Mt Isa Institute of TAFE) 2009
• If you publish material owned by someone else, clearly indicate the source of the material in the footer of each page
• When including works, (e.g. illustrations, photographs or charts), owned by someone else, include the copyright information next to the actual work.
• When including material that is able to be used for free, (e.g. under Creative Commons), label it in accord with the terms of the licence. Image: My New P-Touch Label Maker.... By ctaloi on Flickr.com
accessed 29 June 2010
• Clip Art is often free to use, however always check the terms & conditions of use.
It is not practical to label each individual image, so include the notice in the footer of the page on which the images appear (e.g. ‘Clip Art sourced from Microsoft.’).
• If you have gained permission to use a work, clearly describe this permission next to the work or in the footer of each page.
(e.g. ‘Reproduced and made available for copying and communication by [INSERT EDUCATION ORGANISATION] for its educational purposes with the permission of Peacock Education Australia’. )
Labelling – attributing what you found
Image: okay! by askal.bosch on Flickr.com accessed 29 June 2010
Labelling … made it yourself?
©TAFE NSW 2007
Reproduced and made available for copying and communication by TAFE NSW for its educational purposes with the permission of Planet Publishing Pty Ltd
Labelling … licence obtained from copyright owner
Labelling … copied under part VB (from a print publication)
Copied Under Part VB, Migan F Urban Landscapes, Planet Publishing Pty Ltd, Sydney, NSW, 2007, p 65
Labelling … copied under VB (from the Internet)
Copied Under Part VB, F Migan, www.animalfarm.com.au/photos/2007/htm, accessed 10 May 2007
Storage optionsWhere Pros Cons
I drive or H drive
• Easy to do • Not easy to share beyond immediate team• Hard to find again, especially after a semester or 2• Not available to students directly• Has to be uploaded to Blackboard• Can’t access off campus
Blackboard • Moderately easy• Can be stored in context with other related learning resources• Can access off campus
• Can’t share beyond the individual course without creating copies• Hard to find again, may be layers deep• Has to be copied across to new course each time it is used
Digibank • Moderately easy • Searchable by keyword, course name, teaching team etc• Easily shared with others in the Institute• Easily linked into multiple Blackboard courses with only 1 copy being held• Information about rights, access and attribution can be kept with it• Accessible off campus
• Digibank will prompt you for the information you should be adding so may take longer to save initially
Not sure what you need is covered here?
Try the information at Smartcopying – faqs, information sheets and more
http://www.smartcopying.edu.au/scw/go
Creative commons information on Smartcopying
http://www.smartcopying.edu.au/scw/go/pid/904
Time to play fetch
Image: Duchess the dog wants to play ball by Hopealso on Flickr accessed 29 June 2010