Post on 06-May-2015
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Example Lecture PresentationKathleen Ludewig Omollo
ICTD 2012 – Open Licenses Example for workshop
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Learning Objectives• This is an example presentation to show the types of
embedded objects that may exist in a document. Many of these images come from https://open.umich.edu/wiki/Casebook.
• Before you publicly share any resource – whether or not you choose to license it – you need to look for copyright, privacy, and endorsement concerns.
• Some images in this some of these images used under section 107, U.S. copyright law: fair use
• The title slide should indicate the default license for the presentation (which may be different from individual embedded objects) and the copyright owner,
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A medical oriented cartoon• This image is highly
expressive.• While the image does
express an idea, which is not in and of itself protectable, there are creative choices made in that expression.
• There is no source information and no copyright notice.
• It may be difficult to find a replacement image that conveys a similar meaning.
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Painting
• This is digital reproduction of a Picasso painting. The original painting from was published prior to 1923.
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Generic Map• This image fundamentally
serves to represent data. • The underlying data is not
protected by copyright.• This depiction shows
common/standard/typical/ordinary/basic/routine choices for the content type.
• There are no real expressive elements, all choices have been made for clarity and to illustrate the underlying data.
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Photo of Door
www.flickr.com/photos/aaronescobar/2163469900/
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Xray
• This is an X-ray, a mechanical representation of the image.
• X-rays are created by a mechanical process, and represent the subject with complete fidelity.
• There are no real expressive elements
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Basic Chemical Representation
• The essential purpose of this image is to represent the composition of a chemical.
• Chemical compositions are represented in definite ways.
• There really is no other basic way to represent this chemical structure.
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Clip art
• This is a clipart image from www.clker.com/clipart-14669.html. A screenshot of the website header is below.
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Basic Plot Graph• This image is a basic
data-driven graph.• The data which
makes up this graph is factual information (either from an experiment, measurements, or other data gathering procedure).
• This depiction shows common/standard/typical/ordinary/basic/routine choices for the content type.
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Anatomy Drawing
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Report from U.S. federal government
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• Pretend this is the whole 75 page report, instead of just a screenshot.
• www.hhs.gov/open/plan/opengovernmentplan/index.html
Basic Color Bar Graph
• This image is a basic data-driven graph.• The data which makes up this graph is factual information (either from
an experiment, measurements, or other data gathering procedure).• This depiction shows
common/standard/typical/ordinary/basic/routine choices for the content type.
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Photo
• This photo was taken by the author of this presentation. It has the same terms of use as the whole presentation.
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U.S. Federal Government Image
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• Photo from Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which is a U.S. federal government agency. Image from http://phil.cdc.gov/phil/details.asp.
Website screenshot
• This is a screenshot of the results from a Google search.
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Photo
• Pretend this is the original photo and not a screenshot. This is from Flickr. Look at terms of use.
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Photo fromcommons.wikimedia.org/wiki
/File:!_Kohlmeise_01.jpg
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Photo fromcommons.wikimedia.
org/wiki/File:%22Carnival_Glory
%22.jpg
Attribution Keyfor more information see: http://open.umich.edu/wiki/AttributionPolicy
Use + Share + Adapt
Make Your Own Assessment
Creative Commons – Attribution License
Creative Commons – Attribution Share Alike License
Creative Commons – Attribution Noncommercial License
Creative Commons – Attribution Noncommercial Share Alike License
GNU – Free Documentation License
Creative Commons – Zero Waiver
Public Domain – Ineligible: Works that are ineligible for copyright protection in the U.S. (17 USC § 102(b)) *laws in your jurisdiction may differ
Public Domain – Expired: Works that are no longer protected due to an expired copyright term.
Public Domain – Government: Works that are produced by the U.S. Government. (17 USC § 105)
Public Domain – Self Dedicated: Works that a copyright holder has dedicated to the public domain.
Fair Use: Use of works that is determined to be Fair consistent with the U.S. Copyright Act. (17 USC § 107) *laws in your jurisdiction may differ
Our determination DOES NOT mean that all uses of this 3rd-party content are Fair Uses and we DO NOT guarantee that your use of the content is Fair.
To use this content you should do your own independent analysis to determine whether or not your use will be Fair.
{ Content the copyright holder, author, or law permits you to use, share and adapt. }
{ Content Open.Michigan believes can be used, shared, and adapted because it is ineligible for copyright. }
{ Content Open.Michigan has used under a Fair Use determination. }