Cardoso, M. (2007, May 20). DJ [Online Image]. Retrieved from https://www.flickr.com/ |
According to the Copyright Act of Canada, Copyright is granted the moment an original work is created regardless of whether the creator applied for a license or not. Copyright means "all rights reserved" and only the copyright owner, often the creator of the work, is allowed to produce or reproduce the work or to permit anyone else to do so.
Irish Typepad (2010, June 5). Copyright Locked [Online Image]. Retrieved from https://www.flickr.com/ |
Bonillo Sierra, A. (2009, April 28). creative_commons [Online Image]. Retrieved from https://www.flickr.com/ |
The term fair use originated in the United States and permits limited use of copyrighted material without acquiring permission from the rights holders. A similar principle, fair dealing, exists in Canadian law and is more restrictive. Differences between fair use and fair dealing can be found on this table.
Kirby Ferguson produced a video series called Everything is a Remix, in which he examines modern attitudes toward intellectual property and how these attitudes stifle creativity rather than foster it.
I used PhotoPeach to create a basic slideshow to explain the importance of Copyright laws, as well as the difference between a work that has a Copyright license and a work with a Creative Commons license. You can check it out on the "SLIDESHOW" page I added to my blog.
Additionally, I used Flickr to locate Copyright friendly images to include in my PhotoPeach slideshow.
These tools are now part of my PLE: PhotoPeach within the "creating" section and Flickr within the "sharing" section.
While on the topic of creative tools, I came across a post on my Feedly titled 10 Word Cloud Generators You Have Probably Never Tried. On one of my previous posts I talked about Wordle and how I used it to create a word cloud on digital citizenship. While Wordle was simple to use (plug your text into the box, select a few options, and you’ve got yourself a word cloud), it did not have an option to choose a shape for your word cloud. If I would've explored more word cloud tools rather than sticking to just one I would've come across Tagul, which works just like Wordle but allows you to choose from a variety of shapes! Try out some yourself and see which one you like most.