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Vanessa

Creative Commons - 0 views

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    Creative Commons is a way of protecting the rights to your work as you share it online. It's an alternate to traditional copyright, and it has a variety of options (including remixing) for permissions/use. Flickr makes use of CC licenses, as do many repositories. Totally worth checking out.
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    This, among other things, is taking our very restrictive concept of ownership to a much more productive and logical level, especially in this age of global knowledge. Many praises for CC.
lissa6414

120+ Places To Find Creative Commons Media - 0 views

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    As we learn more about usage rights and copyrighting, I was thinking that I need a master list of sites I can go to when I want to use images, audio and videos that are public domain. Here is a list of some creative commons websites
Alyn Minnerly

Web 2.0 and Open Educational Resources - 0 views

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    After checking out Vanessa's post on Creative Commons, I googled the title of this post and found an easy to read article that sheds some light as to the power of our tools and providing Open Education. There is mention of C.C. as I think the two are interlinked. When I see stuff like this, it gives me hope that we're moving in the right direction (maybe taking a side step or two along the way).
Dana Bauries

Creative Commons - 0 views

shared by Dana Bauries on 27 Jul 12 - Cached
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    The World Bank announces new Open Access Policy and Open Knowledge Repository The World Bank has announced a new Open Access Policy! Effective July 1, 2012, the Open Access Policy requires that all research outputs and knowledge products published by the Bank be licensed Creative Commons Attribution license (CC BY) as a default.
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    I'm not sure if this is a web2.0 tool, but I found this site interesting. Original ideas, knowledge, projects, music, videos, and etc. can be shared with others. The authors of these tools can claim licenses on this site to protect their work. In addition, the site provides users with millions of videos, songs, content, academic activities etc. that you can legally use for free.
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    I am not sure if its Web 2.0 either, although I suspect not, but its awesome. Indespensible. Thanks for sharing.
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    This is a repeat! Sorry! Vanessa posted this earlier in the course.
msoichot

Can you copyright the content you make with generative AI? | Descript - 6 views

  • because you can’t predict exactly what a generative AI tool will create, you can’t copyright it.
  • The Copyright Office equated the text prompts to telling an artist about an idea you have for a painting, then trying to copyright the work after they paint it.
  • That makes sense if all you provided the artist was ideas, because ideas are not protectable and the painter did the creative work that gives them “authorship,”
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  • Lisa says she would’ve expected the Copyright Office to focus more on the nature of the inputs
  • how much human involvement does a creator have to exert over a machine to claim ownership of its output? 
  • This isn’t the first time the legal system has wrestled with that question. It first came up when cameras were invented; the argument then was that you couldn’t protect a photograph as your own, since the machine was the one capturing the image.
  • The Copyright Office, surprisingly, introduced this predictability standard instead.
  • He used the amusing analogy of Jackson Pollock, who made his art by flinging paint around and seeing what happened; nobody questioned his ability to copyright those works.
  • But in a more salient point for creators, the lawyer argued that the Copyright Office was “incorrectly focusing on the output of the tool rather than the input from the human.”
  • the best thing you can do is to be sure you’re employing as much human creativity in the process as possible.
  • This might mean writing prompts with as much detail as possible
  • A final note: as Lisa points out, the Copyright Office did indicate that if someone sufficiently modifies generated output, that could be protectable. So, If you’re using generative AI as a starting point — e.g., using ChatGPT to create a rough draft and then re-writing it for your own voice — be sure you document the changes you made before you try to file for copyright protection, and then explain it in the application.
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    This is good information! AI has really opened up a lot of opportunities and resources, but it has also presented a lot of questions!
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    This is good information regarding the use of generative AI. I concur with the author that AI-created information should be used as a starting point for developing instructional materials. It should not remove the instructional designer from the process. After all, they would be most knowledgeable about the instructional needs of their learners and the delivery methods available to them.
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    Thanks for sharing this resource. It's super helpful for a project I'm working on right now.
justchan11

Diigo Cheat Sheet - 2 views

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    Still trying to fully understand Diigo, so found a cheat sheet (that also happens to include Creative Commons attribution)
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    Used this to get started. I had no clue what to do! Thanks for posting!
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    Very handy - thanks for sharing!
Dana Bauries

Video Slideshow Maker with Music - 1 views

shared by Dana Bauries on 16 Jul 12 - Cached
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    Animoto turns your photos and video clips into professional video slideshows in minutes. Fast, free and shockingly simple - we make awesome easy.
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    This is awesome. I am going to remember this for future use. Its a fun and easy way to get creative. Thanks!
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    I looked into this when I was putting my end of year slideshow together last May. The thing you need to realize is that it is only free if the video is 30 seconds long. After that, there is a fee. But if you only need a short video, its perfect.
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    I actually use it as a short welcome tool within my virtual classes. The html code is easy to embed.
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    Sounds really cool. I'll have to play with this one. Thanks for sharing.
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    I used it for a goodbye message to a friend of mine and it's pretty cool. However, the free 30" are not enough for any project. I think that, if you have a big presentation, it's worth the small fee.
Alyn Minnerly

Teaching Without Walls: Life Beyond the Lecture: VoiceThread - 0 views

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    How to Participate in a VoiceThread - Shared with a Creative Commons license This is a how-to guide explaining how to leave a comment in a Voicethread. VoiceThread is an online discussion tool that provides opportunities for community building and learning, centered around visual media.
sam sam

[Infographic] The Social Media ROI Solar System - 1 views

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    You could say there's a universe of ways people measure the ROI from their social media marketing. Some of the more popular methods, like counting Facebook "likes" and re-tweets, have very little meaning to the CFO, while other newly developed formulas around engagement can be, well, rather creative.
lissa6414

4 Companies That are Killing It with Crowdsourcing - Planbox - 1 views

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    This resource helped me understand crowdsourcing in a few different contexts
daeunjung

Sharing Openly Licensed Content on Social Media - Creative Commons - 4 views

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    How to provide proper attribution for openly licensed works on social media
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