• An Open Education Reader
  • I. Intellectual Property
  • II. Free Software
  • III. Open Source
  • IV. Open Content
  • V. Defining Free
  • VI. Defining Open
  • VII. Open Source Software Licenses
  • VIII. Open Content Licenses
  • IX. Open CourseWare
  • X. Open Educational Resources
  • XI. Open Textbooks
  • XII. Research in Open Education
  • XIII. The Economics of Open
  • XIV. Open Business Models
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    Creative Commons Licenses

    Read the article at https://edtechbooks.org/-yZN

    Background

    Creative Commons provides the open licenses used by the vast majority of open content, including over 880M items according to a recent report.

    The breadth and depth of license options available through Creative Commons licenses provides any creator with a wide range of opportunities to license any type of work with a human readable license, a “legalese” version of the same license, as well as a machine readable version of the license.  While fixing overaggressive copyright is the best solution, Creative Commons provides authors and creators with a relatively simple way to share their work in the current legal context.

    All CC licenses carry the attribution term “BY.” From there the creator can select from an array of other options which include the following:

    Key Points

    Discussion Questions

    1. Which is the best license?
    2. Under what circumstances would you choose to use which licenses?
    3. Discuss the pros and cons of not using the NC license, thereby allowing commercial use of openly licensed materials for gain.
    4. Under which circumstances would it be best to use a ND license?

    Additional Resources

    GNU Free Documentation License (2014) https://edtechbooks.org/-JLH

    This content is provided to you freely by EdTech Books.

    Access it online or download it at https://edtechbooks.org/openedreader/open-content-licenses-creative-commons.