This document discusses intellectual property rights and Creative Commons licenses. It provides an overview of copyright, patents, trademarks and other intellectual property concepts. It then explains different open licenses like Creative Commons licenses that can be used to share content openly while still providing attribution. The document encourages using open licenses to share and build upon each other's work, and provides some examples of where to find open educational content online.
1. IPR and Creative Commons Licenses
Vesa Linja-aho 2012-03-19 @ Leppävaara
19/3/12 Helsinki Metropolia University of Applied Sciences 1
2. About me
Helsinki University of Technology 2003-2009
Lecturer (Circuit Theory and Electronics) and
Researcher (Information Theory)
Talentum Media 2009-2010
Journalist (Computerworld Finland)
Metropolia UAS 2009-
Senior Lecturer in Automotive Electronics
Interested in improving the quality of teaching and
promoting possibilities of new technology and open
educational resources.
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3. Intellectual property rights (IPR)
Patent
Design protection
Trademark
Copyright
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4. Why are these things difficult and important?
It is rather easy to commit a crime accidentally or nearly
accidentally.
Everyone knows that it is illegal to kill a person, burn
someone’s house or steal a lollipop from grocery store.
But do you know:
Is it legal to copy a textbook?
Is it legal to add a
photo
a diagram
by someone else to your own bachelor’s thesis?
The criminal punishment is usually negligible compared
to the compensations.
In the internet age, it is amazingly easy to make copies of
stuff.
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5. The legislation is rather new
When I was kid,
Copying of computer programs at home was
completely legal.
Downloading music was completely legal.
Only the guy who put it in the internet was criminal.
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6. Brief history
In contrary to popular belief, the copyright law has
nothing to do with the invention of the Gutenberg
printing press.
Even in ancient Rome, copier slaves produced
copies very efficiently.
First modern copyright law was set about 270
years after Gutenberg (Statute of Anne 1710)
The protection time was 14+14 years!
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7. There is virtually no propaganda for what you can do
legally.
In the newspapers, you can read about expensive
compensations for internet piracy.
In school, the children will get leaflets and
instructional comics by copyright industry.
Why not from weapons or fur industry?
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8. Copyright legislation = balancing
Author’s right to get money from his/her work.
The industry’s right to make money.
The other’s right to utilize the work.
Bureaucracy (how hard it is to use someone’s work).
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9. Copyright: the creator’s rights
The creator of the original work has exclusive right to
Produce new copies from the original work
Distribute the original work to the public
In addition to the commercial rights, the creator has
moral rights:
Attribution
Respect right
Access
Classic protection article
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10. Copyright: the user’s rights
Showing a published work. For example: put a copy
on your wall (not on Facebook wall).
Showing is different from presenting it (with a
data projector, for example).
Citing a published work
Parody
Referencing
Private use
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11. Related Rights (Finnish: Lähioikeudet)
Photograph
Database
Audio or video recording
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12. How to use immaterial stuff by others?
Private use
Special rights in teaching
Citation
Use work below threshold of originality
Use work with expired copyright.
Ask for a permission.
In Finland, there is no fair use –concept, like in USA.
Parody is also not mentioned in Finnish law, but it is
included in EU copyright directive.
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13. Private use
You can make private copies of published work.
But you can not redistibute them.
For example: you can take a book from library, scan
it and save it to your computer. Or photocopy it.
You can even use third party help to copy it.
But you are not allowed to upload it to public
internet forum.
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14. Special rights in teaching
Teaching = teaching in school or university. Not in private
education company.
Presetation of published work when teaching.
For example: teacher can show book with document
camera and data projector.
Exception: theatre play and motion picture.
Photocopying 20 pages or 50 % of a book or magazine
and giving the copies to students.
This is from a contract between Ministry of Education
and Culture and Kopiosto (copyright agency), not from
law.
Scanning same the amount and distributing it in intranet,
if you have bought scanning license from Kopiosto.
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15. Unclear
How do you define a ”motion picture”?
Commercial movies
Surveillance camera video?
10 sec, 30 sec, 10 minute video made with mobile
phone video camera?
Virtually no legal praxis (Copyright Council 1998:6).
In practice, risk of getting sued for showing Youtube
video on your lesson is minimal (in my opinion).
The law is from the age before Youtube (and so
are politicians…).
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16. Citation
You can cite a published work in the extent required
for the purpose. (Copyright Act 22 )
Using a ”citation” to decorate your work or just for
fun is not citation!
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17. Image Citation
Copyright Act 25
You can make an image from published work of art
and use it in text-associated context in critical or
scientific purpose.
For example, you can take photo of a statue in your
essay concerning that statue.
Using picture to decorate your essay or book is not
citing.
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18. Use work below the threshold of originality
If the piece of work is not original enough, it is not a
subject of copyright.
The number of hours used to make the work doesn’t
make it copyrightable. The originality is what
matters.
Diagrams, graphs, circuit diagrams, technical
illustrations are generally not subjects of copyright
http://www.opettajantekijanoikeus.fi/2011/11/selittav
at-piirroskuvat-ovat-vapaata-riistaa-yleensa/
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19. Is this a subject of copyright?
http://www.scribd.com/doc/79088037/Elektroniikan-
perusteet-harjoitustehtavia
No. Not even as database (Copyright Council
decision 2012:1).
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20. Is this a subject of copyright?
ONE spot of green, watered by hidden streams,
Makes summer in the desert where it gleams;
And mortals, gazing on thy heavenly face,
Forget the woes of earth, and share thy dreams!
- Florence Van Leer (Earle) Nicholson
Coates (1850–1927)
Yes (it has been, but the copyright has expired)!
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21. Threshold of Originality
If someone else could accomplish the similar output,
the work is not copyrightable.
The threshold of originality is lower in art than
science.
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22. Use work with expired copyright
Copyrightable original work: 70 years from the death
of the author (died 1941 or earlier).
Voice or video recording: 50 years from completing or
publishing the recording (1961 or earlier).
Ordinary photo: 50 years from making the
photograph (1966, because of the transition time in
the law)
Database or catalog: 15 years publishing (1998)
TV or radio transmission: 50 years from last
transmission (1961).
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23. Ask for a permission
http://www.posti.fi/postimuseo/images/lehdisto/hah
moterapiaa/fingerporihahmo.jpg
Me on 2012-01-18 9am: ”Can I use this picture as my
profile picture in my Facebook group?”
Pertti Jarla 2012-01-19 noon: ”Of course you can,
thanks for asking!”
https://www.facebook.com/pages/Vesa-opettaa-
sinulle-s%C3%A4hk%C3%B6tekniikkaa-ja-
elektroniikkaa/290845227630038
What is the problem with this approach?
Case: Phasor calculus book.
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24. Procedures I have seen
Photocopy the book and sell it to students.
Illegal and expensive if caught!
Legal workarounds:
Find more inexpensive book.
Use open material.
Use same book on more courses.
Try to get the school library to buy multiple copies.
Put the material on the course web page (was very
expensive when caught).
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25. Procedures I have seen
Photocopy the book once (to make copying faster for
students), put the copy next to the photocopier and
let students copy it with their card.
Illegal. The legal way: tear the covers off the book
and put the pages next to photocopier.
Now student can put the pages in the document feeder
easily and legally.
The professor ”forgets” a memory stick with ebook in
the front desk of the class.
It is legal to forget but illegal to ”forget”.
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26. Unclear situations
The copyright holder is not traceable
The work is distributed freely over internet and the
author gives quiet acceptance for it.
International situations: the Swedish author, Chinese
student in Finland, servers in USA.
General rule: use the copyright legislation of the
origin country of the piece of work (Berne
Convention).
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27. What to do if I wanted to use this photo? Who to
contact?
28. Part Two: Open Licenses
Openness is today’s hot topic.
Anyone heard of:
Linux?
Firefox?
Wikipedia?
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29. Free or Open?
Free = You do not have pay for it.
Free speech vs. free beer.
Open = You can examine it, modify it and
redistribute it – even commercially.
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30. Internet is changing the education, and it’s
happening fast!
Does the Internet do same to the education what it did to
newspapers?
https://6002x.mitx.mit.edu/
http://ocw.mit.edu/courses/electrical-engineering-and-
computer-science/6-00sc-introduction-to-computer-
science-and-programming-spring-2011/
http://mooc.cs.helsinki.fi/
http://www.ocwconsortium.org/
www.codecademy.com/
In Finland the change is slower:
Small language area
Education is funded from tax money (no direct market
feedback).
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31. How to license your work with open license
Open licenses for computer programs: Apache
license, GPL, LGPL, MIT License, …
Can be used for documents and artwork too.
More popular for documents and art: The Creative
Commoncs –licenses:
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/
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32. Why to use open license in your work?
It’s fun to share!
It’s free advertisement for you
I’ve got
two job offers
Several speech requests
in a year, just for this: http://www.slideshare.net/linjaaho
The more people use open license, the more we have free
and open content!
The others can improve your work and you can use the
improved work.
Why not?
Some people say that closed products are of better
quality, which sometimes is true, sometimes not.
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33. 19/3/12 Helsinki Metropolia University of Applied Sciences 33
34. License lets others distribute, remix, tweak, and build
upon your work, even commercially, as long as they
credit you for the original creation. This is the most
accommodating of licenses offered. Recommended for
maximum dissemination and use of licensed materials.
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35. This license lets others remix, tweak, and build upon
your work even for commercial purposes, as long as
they credit you and license their new creations
under the identical terms. This license is often
compared to “copyleft” free and open source
software licenses. All new works based on yours will
carry the same license, so any derivatives will also
allow commercial use. This is the license used by
Wikipedia, and is recommended for materials that
would benefit from incorporating content from
Wikipedia and similarly licensed projects.
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36. This license allows for redistribution, commercial and
non-commercial, as long as it is passed along
unchanged and in whole, with credit to you.
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37. This license lets others remix, tweak, and build upon
your work non-commercially, and although their
new works must also acknowledge you and be non-
commercial, they don’t have to license their
derivative works on the same terms.
What problems do you see with this license?
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38. Combinations of the previous mentioned.
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39. Where to find open content?
http://linja-aho.blogspot.com/2011/04/avoin-
oppimateriaali-mista-sita-saa-osa.html
It’s in Finnish, but just click the links – the targets are
in English .
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40. I would love to have your feedback or questions:
firstname.surname@metropolia.fi