23
A Workable Alternative To Copyright? 2014-11-17 This work was created by Caroline N. Rowan and is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial ShareAlike License. To view a copy of the license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/

Creative commons-licencing-2014-11-17-inc-cc-licence

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Creative commons-licencing-2014-11-17-inc-cc-licence

A Workable Alternative To Copyright?

2014-11-17 This work was created by Caroline N. Rowan and is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial ShareAlike License. To view a copy of the license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/

Page 2: Creative commons-licencing-2014-11-17-inc-cc-licence

Copyright: the exclusive right to produce copies and to control an original literary, musical, or artistic work, granted by law for a specified number of years.Collins Online Dictionary http://www.collinsdictionary.com/dictionary/english/copyright?showCookiePolicy=true

Page 3: Creative commons-licencing-2014-11-17-inc-cc-licence

• 17.—(1) Copyright is a property right whereby, subject to this Act, the owner of the

copyright in any work may undertake or authorise other persons in relation to that

work to undertake certain acts in the State, being acts which are designated by this Act

as acts restricted by copyright in a work of that description.

(2) Copyright subsists, in accordance with this Act, in—

(a) original literary, dramatic, musical or artistic works,

(b) sound recordings, films, broadcasts or cable programmes,

(c) the typographical arrangement of published editions, and

(d) original databases.

COPYRIGHT AND RELATED RIGHTS ACT, 2000 S.I. 28 of 2000

Page 4: Creative commons-licencing-2014-11-17-inc-cc-licence

Copyright:

• Requires explicit prior permission from the copyright owner to use, amend, adapt, copy or distribute the copyright work.

• Is an automatic right and does not have to be registered.

• Covers only the expression of an idea, not the idea itself.

• Copyright of work produced while working for an employer belongs to the employer, unless otherwise provided for in a contract of employment.

Page 5: Creative commons-licencing-2014-11-17-inc-cc-licence

Why look for an alternative to copyright?

Collaboration/information sharing

Encourage creativity

Build a personal profile – artists/writers etc.

Altruism

Page 6: Creative commons-licencing-2014-11-17-inc-cc-licence
Page 7: Creative commons-licencing-2014-11-17-inc-cc-licence

Creative Commons is a non-profit organisation that enables the sharing and use of creativity and knowledge through free legal tools.https://creativecommons.org/about

CREATIVE COMMONS

Page 8: Creative commons-licencing-2014-11-17-inc-cc-licence

Creative Commons have created several licences which may be used free of charge by the public.

These licences permit:• use of copyright material • without prior explicit permission • subject to the conditions of the

licence.

CREATIVE COMMONS LICENCES

Page 9: Creative commons-licencing-2014-11-17-inc-cc-licence

Creative Commons licences do not replace copyright,

but are based upon it.

Page 10: Creative commons-licencing-2014-11-17-inc-cc-licence

Author/Creator – the individual/entity which created the content in the first instance.

Licensor – the person/entity granting permission to use the created content. Licensor is not necessarily the creator of the content, as Creative Commons licences can facilitate third party licensing of content.

Licensee – the person/entity to whom permission to use material is granted.

Page 11: Creative commons-licencing-2014-11-17-inc-cc-licence

Creative Commons licences

6 types:

1. Attribution CC BY2. Attribution-ShareAlike CC BY-SA3. Attribution-NoDerivs CC BY-ND4. Attribution-NonCommercial CC BY-NC5. Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike CC BY-NC-SA6. Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs CC BY-NC-ND

Page 12: Creative commons-licencing-2014-11-17-inc-cc-licence

Attribution

CC-BY

Attribution required Y

Can edit/remix/tweak Y

Can distribute Y

Can build upon Y

Can be used commercially Y

Same licence terms required for any new work N

Page 13: Creative commons-licencing-2014-11-17-inc-cc-licence

Attribution-ShareAlike

CC-BY-SA

Attribution required Y

Can edit/remix/tweak Y

Can distribute Y

Can build upon Y

Can be used commercially Y

Same licence terms required for any new work Y

Page 14: Creative commons-licencing-2014-11-17-inc-cc-licence

Attribution-NoDerivs

CC-BY-ND

Attribution required Y

Can edit/remix/tweak N

Can distribute Y

Can build upon N

Can be used commercially Y

Same licence terms required for any new work N/A

Page 15: Creative commons-licencing-2014-11-17-inc-cc-licence

Attribution-NonCommercial

CC-BY-SA

Attribution required Y

Can edit/remix/tweak Y

Can distribute Y

Can build upon Y

Can be used commercially N

Same licence terms required for any new work N

Page 16: Creative commons-licencing-2014-11-17-inc-cc-licence

Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike

CC-BY-NC-SA

Attribution required Y

Can edit/remix/tweak Y

Can distribute Y

Can build upon Y

Can be used commercially N

Same licence terms required for any new work Y

Page 17: Creative commons-licencing-2014-11-17-inc-cc-licence

Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs

CC-BY-NC-ND

Attribution required Y

Can edit/remix/tweak N

Can distribute Y

Can build upon N

Can be used commercially N

Same licence terms required for any new work N/A

Page 18: Creative commons-licencing-2014-11-17-inc-cc-licence

All Creative Commons licenses require

licensees to:

Credit the licensor

Keep copyright notices intact on all copies of the work

Link to the licence from copies of the work.

Page 19: Creative commons-licencing-2014-11-17-inc-cc-licence

Licensees cannot use technological measures to restrict access to the work by others.

Page 20: Creative commons-licencing-2014-11-17-inc-cc-licence

Applying a Creative Commons licence

http://creativecommons.org/choose/

Page 21: Creative commons-licencing-2014-11-17-inc-cc-licence

A few things to think about

• Are there multiple elements which need to be licensed?

• Does copyright legislation actually apply to the material?

• Is anything in your material subject to licence from someone else?

• Could the copyright belong to your employer?

NB: Creative Commons licences cannot be revoked, even if you later delete content or stop distributing the work in question.

Page 22: Creative commons-licencing-2014-11-17-inc-cc-licence

Useful links

http://creativecommons.org/

http://www.ucc.ie/law/irishlaw/creativecommons/Creative-Commons-Ireland-summary.pdf

https://wiki.creativecommons.org/Ireland

UCC Law Department is the Irish Partner for Creative Commons Licence. Dr. Darius Whelan and Dr. Louise Crowley are the key contacts.

Page 23: Creative commons-licencing-2014-11-17-inc-cc-licence

Any questions?

Caroline N [email protected]