Copyright and fair use

by billso on Thursday, 21 February 2008

For my stu­dents, here’s a quick sum­mary of some links and mate­ri­als on copy­right and fair use.

The con­tent on this web site is copy­righted and avail­able through an alter­na­tive scheme called Cre­ative Com­mons. I’ve cho­sen a license that lets any­one share, remix and mod­ify my work, as long as they give me credit for the orig­i­nal work. As this page explains, the CC license allows me to claim “some rights reserved”, which is less restric­tive than the “all rights reserved” terms of copy­right, but pro­vides me more rights than plac­ing my work into the pub­lic domain where no one owns any­thing. These videos explain the CC sys­tem, and there is also a FAQ.

The Cre­ative Com­mons scheme also works well on the Inter­net, as the licenses can be attached to elec­tronic doc­u­ments and files. The Inter­net works like a copy machine, as Kevin Kelly pointed out in this Jan­u­ary 2008 arti­cle. I dis­cussed this issue in this 4 Feb­ru­ary 2008 post.

A cou­ple of times a week, one of my mon­i­tor­ing tools will tell me that an auto­mated script has been scrap­ing my RSS feed and repost­ing my con­tent on a fake blog. If they give me credit for my work, I leave them alone. After all, I’m not claim­ing copy­right on my this blog.

Fair use lets peo­ple post or repub­lish a small por­tion of some­one else’s work, as long as proper attri­bu­tion or creedit is included. That’s a key rea­son why I have my stu­dents use TurnItIn.com to sub­mit assignments.

Related pages on billso.com

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