KEMBAR78
To Copy or Not To Copy? That is the Real Question | PPT
To Copy or Not to Copy?
  That is the REAL Question:
A Detailed Explanation of Copyrighting, Fair
         Use, & Creative Commons


        By: Monica H. Fernandez
              MHFernandez@mac.com
Copyright?
What is the Copyright
                          Law?
When we create some type of work, it
 automatically has a copyright on it.
 This means that other people cannot
 copy, reproduce, or distribute it
 without our permission.
Copyrighting in the
                     Classroom:
• It is important students to fully
  understand what they can and cannot
  do. As teachers, we must explain that
  it is not legal to copy someone else's
  work without their permission or to
  quote them without using a reference.
Copyrighting for
                         Teachers
• Educators are often sharing their work
  with each other. However, teachers
  need to understand that we still need
  permission to use others work.
Links for Teachers,
          Parents, and Students:
• Links for Teachers & Parents:
  – http://www.copyrightkids.org/teachrentframes.html
  – http://www.cybercitizenship.org/index/html

  Links for Kids:
  – http://www.copyrightkids.org/
  – http://www.cybercitizenship.org/4kids/4kids.ht
    ml
Fair Use: What is it?
• According to the Code of Best Practices in Fair Use for Media
  Literacy Education, Fair Use is basically considering all facts and
  circumstances and deciding if using an unlicensed copyrighted
  material generates social or cultural benefits that are grater than the
  cost it imposes on the copyright of the owner. Therefore, it is OK to
  use unlicensed material it can generate new and useful material that
  may have a great effect on our culture.

• Fair Use provides educators with the opportunity to be open and
  public about asserting the appropriateness of their practices and the
  justifications for them.
Video of Fair Use:
• This is a Link to a YouTube Video that
  gives a great explanation of what Fair
  Use is and how it relate to the
  Copyright Law:
  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GidwzO
The Five Basic Principles of Fair Use:
1. Employing copyrighted material on media
   literacy lessons
2. Material in Preparing Curriculum Materials –
3. Sharing Media Literacy Curriculum Materials
4. Students Use of Copyrighted Materials in
   their
5. Developing Audience for Student Work
•   The informaiton found on this slide is from "The Code of Best Practices in
    Fair Use for Media Literacy Education."
    http://online.education.ufl.edu/file.php/3208/05DigitalCitizen/CodeofBest
    PracticesinFairUse.pdf
Four Factor Test:
•   Only a Judge in a courtroom can determine if something is fair use or not. However, you
    can use the "four factor test" (suggested on the ninch website:
    http://www.ninch.org/issues/copyright/FAIR_USE_EDUCATION/FAIRUSE_Intro/WhatIsFairUse.html) to
    try to make a personal judgment:

•   The Four Factors laid down by Section 107 of copyright law are those to be used to
    determine whether a use of copyright material in a particular case is a "fair use" or not.
•   1. the purpose and character of the use, including whether such use is of a commercial
    nature or is for nonprofit educational purposes;
•   2. the nature of the copyrighted work;
•   3. the amount and substantiality of the portion used in relation to the copyrighted work
    as a whole; and
•   the effect of the use upon the potential market for or value of the copyrighted work.
•   4.The fact that a work is unpublished shall not itself bar a finding of fair use if such
    finding is made upon consideration of all the above factors.
Two Key Questions:
• Judges turn to two key questions when trying to decided if
  something can considered “fair use”:
   – Did the unlicensed use “transform” the material taken
     from the copyrighted work by using it for a different
     purpose than that of the original, or did it just repeat the
     work for the same intent and value as the original?
   – Was the material taken appropriate in kind and amount,
     considering the nature of the copyrighted work and of the
     use?

• The informaiton found on this cube is from"The Code of Best Practices
  in Fair Use for Media Literacy Education."
  http://online.education.ufl.edu/file.php/3208/05DigitalCitizen/Code
  ofBestPracticesinFairUse.pdf
What does this mean?
• Since whatever we create, write, or post
  online has a copyright on it, others cannot
  freely use our work without our permission
  or getting a judge to determine “fair use”.
• But what if we WANT to share our work?
• How can we find work that creators want to
  share?
What is Creative
                             Commons?
• Creative Commons is a program
  that was designed to help creators
   share their work with others
  while allowing them to specify the
  details. Creative Commons allows
  us to customize our work so we
  can tell people which parts we
  would allow them to use or
  remake and other parts that we
  want to keep to ourselves.
How can we do this?
• All you have to do is visit the Creative
  Commons Website
  (http://creativecommons.org) and
  answer a few questions about your
  creation and Creative Commons will
  make a custom copyright license for
  our work that others will follow.
The 6 Types of
                                                  Licenses:
•   Creative Commons offers six different types of licenses: Attribution, Attribution Share
    Alike, Attribution No Derivatives, Attribution Non-Commercial, Attribution Non-
    Commercial Share Alike, Attribution Non-Commercial No Derivatives. Attributions let
    other copy, distribute, display, and perform your copyrighted work- and derivative
    works based upon it- but only if they give credit the way you request. If the license says
    Share Alike this means that you will allow others to distribute derivative works only
    under a license identical to the license that governs your work. Non-commercial means
    that you will allow other people to copy, distribute, display, and perform your work –
    and derivative works based upon it- but for noncommercial purposes only. If you choose
    to not have derivative works then you will let others copy, distribute, display, and
    perform only verbatim copies of your work, not derivate works based upon it.

•   This information was found on this websites:
    http://creativecommons.org/about/licenses/
What Does This Mean
     For Educators?


      QuickTimeª and a
        decompressor
 are needed to see this picture.
What Does This Mean for
                            Educators?


• Teachers often gather copyrighted information from the internet,
  conferences, other teachers, books, etc. We usually rely on the idea of
  sharing. However, according to copyright laws, we are technically not
  supposed to use the information we find without permission of the
  creator. Now, we have just learned how "Fair Use" can help use use
  material that is copyrighted however, this is not legal unless a judge
  decided the material is "Fair Use" and it can be a long process to
  determine what is "fair." Therefore, educators can benefit from using the
  Creative Commons webpage. This website will allow us to help other
  educators as well as find information that is safe for us to use. Creative
  commons is a wonderful idea and helps make 21st century learning a lot
  easier for teachers to implement in their classrooms.

To Copy or Not To Copy? That is the Real Question

  • 1.
    To Copy orNot to Copy? That is the REAL Question: A Detailed Explanation of Copyrighting, Fair Use, & Creative Commons By: Monica H. Fernandez MHFernandez@mac.com
  • 2.
  • 3.
    What is theCopyright Law? When we create some type of work, it automatically has a copyright on it. This means that other people cannot copy, reproduce, or distribute it without our permission.
  • 4.
    Copyrighting in the Classroom: • It is important students to fully understand what they can and cannot do. As teachers, we must explain that it is not legal to copy someone else's work without their permission or to quote them without using a reference.
  • 5.
    Copyrighting for Teachers • Educators are often sharing their work with each other. However, teachers need to understand that we still need permission to use others work.
  • 6.
    Links for Teachers, Parents, and Students: • Links for Teachers & Parents: – http://www.copyrightkids.org/teachrentframes.html – http://www.cybercitizenship.org/index/html Links for Kids: – http://www.copyrightkids.org/ – http://www.cybercitizenship.org/4kids/4kids.ht ml
  • 8.
    Fair Use: Whatis it? • According to the Code of Best Practices in Fair Use for Media Literacy Education, Fair Use is basically considering all facts and circumstances and deciding if using an unlicensed copyrighted material generates social or cultural benefits that are grater than the cost it imposes on the copyright of the owner. Therefore, it is OK to use unlicensed material it can generate new and useful material that may have a great effect on our culture. • Fair Use provides educators with the opportunity to be open and public about asserting the appropriateness of their practices and the justifications for them.
  • 9.
    Video of FairUse: • This is a Link to a YouTube Video that gives a great explanation of what Fair Use is and how it relate to the Copyright Law: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GidwzO
  • 10.
    The Five BasicPrinciples of Fair Use: 1. Employing copyrighted material on media literacy lessons 2. Material in Preparing Curriculum Materials – 3. Sharing Media Literacy Curriculum Materials 4. Students Use of Copyrighted Materials in their 5. Developing Audience for Student Work • The informaiton found on this slide is from "The Code of Best Practices in Fair Use for Media Literacy Education." http://online.education.ufl.edu/file.php/3208/05DigitalCitizen/CodeofBest PracticesinFairUse.pdf
  • 11.
    Four Factor Test: • Only a Judge in a courtroom can determine if something is fair use or not. However, you can use the "four factor test" (suggested on the ninch website: http://www.ninch.org/issues/copyright/FAIR_USE_EDUCATION/FAIRUSE_Intro/WhatIsFairUse.html) to try to make a personal judgment: • The Four Factors laid down by Section 107 of copyright law are those to be used to determine whether a use of copyright material in a particular case is a "fair use" or not. • 1. the purpose and character of the use, including whether such use is of a commercial nature or is for nonprofit educational purposes; • 2. the nature of the copyrighted work; • 3. the amount and substantiality of the portion used in relation to the copyrighted work as a whole; and • the effect of the use upon the potential market for or value of the copyrighted work. • 4.The fact that a work is unpublished shall not itself bar a finding of fair use if such finding is made upon consideration of all the above factors.
  • 12.
    Two Key Questions: •Judges turn to two key questions when trying to decided if something can considered “fair use”: – Did the unlicensed use “transform” the material taken from the copyrighted work by using it for a different purpose than that of the original, or did it just repeat the work for the same intent and value as the original? – Was the material taken appropriate in kind and amount, considering the nature of the copyrighted work and of the use? • The informaiton found on this cube is from"The Code of Best Practices in Fair Use for Media Literacy Education." http://online.education.ufl.edu/file.php/3208/05DigitalCitizen/Code ofBestPracticesinFairUse.pdf
  • 13.
    What does thismean? • Since whatever we create, write, or post online has a copyright on it, others cannot freely use our work without our permission or getting a judge to determine “fair use”. • But what if we WANT to share our work? • How can we find work that creators want to share?
  • 15.
    What is Creative Commons? • Creative Commons is a program that was designed to help creators share their work with others while allowing them to specify the details. Creative Commons allows us to customize our work so we can tell people which parts we would allow them to use or remake and other parts that we want to keep to ourselves.
  • 16.
    How can wedo this? • All you have to do is visit the Creative Commons Website (http://creativecommons.org) and answer a few questions about your creation and Creative Commons will make a custom copyright license for our work that others will follow.
  • 17.
    The 6 Typesof Licenses: • Creative Commons offers six different types of licenses: Attribution, Attribution Share Alike, Attribution No Derivatives, Attribution Non-Commercial, Attribution Non- Commercial Share Alike, Attribution Non-Commercial No Derivatives. Attributions let other copy, distribute, display, and perform your copyrighted work- and derivative works based upon it- but only if they give credit the way you request. If the license says Share Alike this means that you will allow others to distribute derivative works only under a license identical to the license that governs your work. Non-commercial means that you will allow other people to copy, distribute, display, and perform your work – and derivative works based upon it- but for noncommercial purposes only. If you choose to not have derivative works then you will let others copy, distribute, display, and perform only verbatim copies of your work, not derivate works based upon it. • This information was found on this websites: http://creativecommons.org/about/licenses/
  • 18.
    What Does ThisMean For Educators? QuickTimeª and a decompressor are needed to see this picture.
  • 19.
    What Does ThisMean for Educators? • Teachers often gather copyrighted information from the internet, conferences, other teachers, books, etc. We usually rely on the idea of sharing. However, according to copyright laws, we are technically not supposed to use the information we find without permission of the creator. Now, we have just learned how "Fair Use" can help use use material that is copyrighted however, this is not legal unless a judge decided the material is "Fair Use" and it can be a long process to determine what is "fair." Therefore, educators can benefit from using the Creative Commons webpage. This website will allow us to help other educators as well as find information that is safe for us to use. Creative commons is a wonderful idea and helps make 21st century learning a lot easier for teachers to implement in their classrooms.