15. 1 2
3 Paste the license in your blog footer / blog post footer
16. Allows users to choose one of the six
Creative Commons licenses to apply to the
content they upload to Facebook.
-- CURRENTLY ON HOLD –
Add your license and the way you want to be
attributed below each photo and album description.
17.
18.
19. Add the way you want to be attributed below each
photo and album description, since it’s often hard to
for people to attribute flickr photos properly.
20. Add the way you want to be attributed below each
photo and album description.
22. For all videos it is a good idea to add a mention of
your licensing in the credits section of the video, as
well as the video description.
23. For all slides / documents it is a good idea to add a
mention of your licensing in the end or beginning
24.
25.
26.
27.
28. When done properly attribution helps both you & the previous authors of the
work gain more authority & reach more people
29. 1. KEEP INTACT ANY COPYRIGHT NOTICES FOR THE WORK
2. CREDIT THE AUTHOR, LICENSOR AND/OR OTHER PARTIES IN THE
MANNER THEY SPECIFY
3. THE TITLE OF THE WORK + THE URL FOR THE WORK IF APPLICABLE.
4. URL FOR THE CREATIVE COMMONS LICENSE SELECTED WITH EACH
COPY OF THE WORK THAT YOU MAKE AVAILABLE.
5. IF YOU ARE MAKING A DERIVATIVE , YOU NEED TO IDENTIFY THAT
YOUR WORK IS A DERIVATIVE WORK
Telling the author of work will not only make the but also help you promote your work.
30. A suite of tools that makes it
ridiculously simple for anyone to copy
and paste the correct attribution for
any CC licensed work. These tools will
query the metadata around a CC-
licensed object and produce a properly
formatted attribution that users can
copy and paste wherever they need to.
31. This presentsation was created by Darine Sabbagh in
collaboration with Eman Jaradat.
Slides 5-10 and the background for the entrie
presentation were designed by Naeema Zarif |
www.naeemazarif.com | CC BY NC
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons
Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported
License. To view a copy of this license, visit
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/ or
send a letter to Creative Commons, 171 Second Street,
Suite 300, San Francisco, California, 94105, USA.
Check out this license’s limiitations here.
We would be happy to hear about how this
presentation has helped you