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Remix, Reuse, or Repurpose This Blog Post! Creative Commons Teachable Moment

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

They provide tools that let everyone have a simple, standardized way to grant copyright permissions to their creative work. The Creative Commons licenses enable people to easily change their copyright terms from the default of “all rights reserved” to “ some rights reserved.” What does that mean?".

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How do you define Creative Commons Attribution?

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

Earlier this week, I wrote a post called " What happens when you set your content free using Creative Commons Licensing? " I explained why I set my own work free, provided some examples, and pointed to a new tool. The First Giving Blog has a post " Riffing On Creative Commons License ". And how do you respond?

Remix 56
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Who Owns Visitor Content?

Museum 2.0

It seems like the most iron-clad, clear approach for a risk-averse museum, and it promotes awareness of privacy issues. But this approach limits the museum to being a generic platform for creation, rather than connecting visitors to museum-owned or –licensed artifacts. Restricted Use. The interactive “owns” the content.

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This Digital Marketing Process Will Make You Write Better Content

Nonprofits Source

Build Brand Awareness. For example, an infographic could be a great way to earn backlinks to your site while building brand awareness to your mission. Avoid Copyright Infringement. The best way to avoid this type of action is to ask for permission or purchase a license. In terms of style, I like to keep things simple.

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