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Miriam Unruh

OER stories/BCcampus - OER_Wiki - 2 views

  • The BC Commons license is similar to the Creative Commons license but limits sharing to the local context of BC’s public post-secondary system. Resources licensed via BC Commons are available to BC public post-secondary faculty and staff only. This option provides developers with an opportunity to experience sustainable development benefits through sharing on a local level, among peers, before considering the larger global context. Over 90% of OPDF developers have chosen the BC Commons license.
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    Note BC's comment I highlighted on regional vs. global copyright and the kinds of decisions made my resource creators about which copyright option they chose. I think it's interesting and not so suprising that many went with the regional copyright option.
Karen Keiller

YouTube - A Fair(y) Use Tale - 1 views

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    This ten minute movie, directed by Eric Faden, came out of Stanford University's Fair Use Project Documentary Film Program. Stanford's Fair Use Project--to which Stanford Law professor, Copyright guru, Creative Commons advocate and Wired writer Lawrence Lessig contributes--was founded to "support to a range of projects designed to clarify, and extend, the boundaries of fair use in order to enhance creative freedom." And, well, the movie is very creative, and certainly seems to take the boundaries of fair use about as far as they can go.
Miriam Unruh

Learning with 'e's: Movements for change - 2 views

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    I follow Steve Wheeler on Twitter. He's located in University of Plymouth and provides a British 'take' on OERs.
Karen Keiller

Jammer Direct | JamMedia 2.0 > RiP: A Remix Manifesto - 1 views

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    This week our class is going to the movies. Copyright can be a bit dry, but RIP: A Reminx Manifesto is not dry!
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