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Scholarly Communication  Tags: research scholarly_communication publishing open_access copyright  

Resources for scholarly publishing, author rights and maximizing the impact of your research.
Last update: Oct 08th, 2009 URL: http://research.dom.edu/scholarlycommunication  Print Guide  RSS Updates

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Video: About CC

Approximately 3:00.  Click on the Fullscreen Toggle icon below (looks likes a little TV) for a fullscreen view.


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Video: A Shared Culture

Approximately 3:20.  Click on the Fullscreen Toggle icon below (looks like a little TV) for a fullscreen view.


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Track Your CC-Licensed Work

FairShare
http://www.fairshare.cc/fairshare/


"A free service that enables you to claim your work, watch how it spreads and learn how it is used across the Web.  If it's text and published via RSS, you can claim it: Blog posts, poems, recipes, songs, essays, car reviews, game cheats, celebrity scoops, love letters, you name it."

 
 

What is Creative Commons?

Creative Commons (a group of intellectual property experts – lawyers and librarians) created a set of free licenses for you so you can clearly define what rights you are keeping and what rights you are sharing.  You keep the rights you need and let others use your work in ways you specify.  All licenses include proper attribution to you.  You choose the license that works best for you. The conditions in the licenses run from "no rights reserved" to "all rights reserved."  Creative Commons has a sub-project, Science Commons, "designed to accelerate the research cycle — the continuous production and reuse of knowledge that is at the heart of the scientific method."

Fill out the online form and CC will automatically generate your license. 

The basic four conditions are:

Attribution : You let others copy, distribute, display, and perform your copyrighted work — and derivative works based upon it — but only if they give credit the way you request.

Noncommercial : You let others copy, distribute, display, and perform your work — and derivative works based upon it — but for noncommercial purposes only.

No Derivative Works : You let others copy, distribute, display, and perform only verbatim copies of your work, not derivative works based upon it.

Share Alike : You allow others to distribute derivative works only under a license identical to the license that governs your work.

These conditions can be combined to produce six licenses :

  1. Attribution
  2. Attribution – Share Alike
  3. Attribution – Non Commercial
  4. Attribution – No Derivatives
  5. Attribution – Share Alike – Non Commercial
  6. Attribution – Non Commercial – No Derivatives

Your license choice will be expressed in three ways:

  1. Commons Deed. A plain-language summary of the license, complete with the relevant icons.
  2. Legal Code. The fine print that you need to be sure the license will stand up in court.
  3. Digital Code. A machine-readable translation of the license that helps search engines and other applications identify your work by its terms of use.

*Adapted from the Creative Commons website.  Adapted and used with permission from Columbia College, Chicago.

 

Find CC-Licensed Work You Can Use

Click here to learn how you find photos, music, video, educational materials and more that you can use in your work, your classroom and your presentations.

Add your Favorite Web Sites

Add your favorite Web sites on Creative Commons.

 

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Profile ImageCaroline Sietmann


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