The term used to describe works of art or intellect (a pice of writing, a song, an image, etc) belonging to their creator.
What is intellectual property?
1) The Purpose & Character of Use
2) The Nature of the Copyrighted Work
3) The Amount and Importance of the Portion Taken
4) The Effect of the Use on the Potential Market
What are the four factors that legal standards center for fair use?
The number of specifications that can be combined in a Creative Commons license?
What is 4?
Website where users can post and pin images that typically come from other sources on the internet.
What is Pinterest?
Citation style that we use in this class
What is MLA?
A creator's right to control what happens to any copies (such as digital reproductions or quotations) of their work.
What is copyright?
In considering this factor, courts have discussed how the quoted material functions in overall work--is it copied in, or has it somehow been transformed? Is it just for illustration, or is it being used to make commentary or criticism?
What is Purpose and Character?
The baseline license, and all CC licenses include this specification, which means that you must acknowledge the initial creator of the image you are using.
What is BY: Attribution?
Works that you have created.
What is Original Works?
What is when citing your original work?
Phrase that is default for copyright, meaning: only the creator of a work has any right to its use, and anyone who wants to use it has to negotiate with the creator (or the owner of the copyright, in some cases) for permission to use the work.
What is "all rights reserved?"
Usually this boils down to how well-known the quoted material is. Is it from a famous, published work, or is it from an obscure artist who never formally published it?
What is Nature?
This means that the creator allows you to use the work, but you must use the whole work, unchanged.
What is ND: No Derivatives?
An image for which the original creator no longer retains any rights.
What is Public Domain Images?
If an image doesn't have an official title you should use____.
What is a descriptive title?
Our legal system's recognition that there are legitimate reasons why someone might need to use another person's work, even despite "all rights reserved."
What is fair use?
Are you borrowing the entire work, or just a small part of it? And if its just a portion, are you using the 'heart' of it, the most important or recognizable bit?
What is Amount and Importance?
You can use the image, but not for commercial purposes.
What is NC: Non-Commercial?
Website that has a large pool of images and clearly lists the Creative Commons licenses of each work.
What is Flickr?
Creative Commons, public domain, a fair use of copyrighted work, or original work all describe an image's___
What is licensing?
One of the largest organizations that facilitates creators sharing of some of the rights to their content.
What is Creative Commons?
Is your use affecting the creator's ability to make money from their creation?
What is Market Effect?
This means that, if you use the image and choose to distribute your finished product, you must use the same license.
What is SA: Share-alike?
A tool by google that helps determine the original source and author of an image.
What is Reverse Image Search?
For this course, these components should be included in an image citation.
What is Author name/username, picture title, licensing information, and url.