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Q&A for How to Attribute a Creative Commons Licensed Work
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QuestionWhat if you want to use a Creative Commons licensed image in a print publication - where you can't 'link'?Lahaina Araneta, Esq. is an Immigration Attorney for Orange County, California with over 6 years of experience. She received her JD from Loyola Law School in 2012. In law school, she participated in the immigrant justice practicum and served as a volunteer with several nonprofit agencies.Creative commons policies mean that even if a creator distributes a work in digital format, you have permission to print and share a hard copy of the same work, but it must still be credited in the same fashion as the digital work.
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QuestionI design some artistic websites where any additional text would be very disturbing, and I wonder if in such cases, it is fine to collect the attributions in a list in the disclaimer?Lahaina Araneta, Esq. is an Immigration Attorney for Orange County, California with over 6 years of experience. She received her JD from Loyola Law School in 2012. In law school, she participated in the immigrant justice practicum and served as a volunteer with several nonprofit agencies.It depends on where this disclaimer is. So long as it is obvious enough to make it clear that the work does not belong to the user, it may be okay. It can also be shortened to make it less "disturbing." TASL is a good acronym to use when giving credit. This stands for Title, Author, Source, and License.
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QuestionHow do I share photos with a creative commons license on Twitter?Lahaina Araneta, Esq. is an Immigration Attorney for Orange County, California with over 6 years of experience. She received her JD from Loyola Law School in 2012. In law school, she participated in the immigrant justice practicum and served as a volunteer with several nonprofit agencies.There is a conflict when a user uploads CC-licensed content owned by third parties because the user cannot grant rights to content they don’t own; only the original CC licencor can grant these rights to the platform.Therefore, unless, the owner states this can be used on platform X (such as Twitter) it is best not to upload it without all the attributable credits.
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QuestionHow do you credit a photo used in a video? At the end, or overlayed on top of the photo?Lahaina Araneta, Esq. is an Immigration Attorney for Orange County, California with over 6 years of experience. She received her JD from Loyola Law School in 2012. In law school, she participated in the immigrant justice practicum and served as a volunteer with several nonprofit agencies.All that matters is that you credit the item within the media itself. For example, you could include a complete list of attributions at the end of the video, or you could include an audio recording of the attributions at the end. For example, you could write, "Video example 1: "Science Commons" by Jesse Dylan - see attribution starting at 1:52."
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