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A Visual Guide to Content Analysis / april 2009 / OCWC Global Except where otherwise noted, this work is available under a Creative Commons Attribution.

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Presentation on theme: "A Visual Guide to Content Analysis / april 2009 / OCWC Global Except where otherwise noted, this work is available under a Creative Commons Attribution."— Presentation transcript:

1 A Visual Guide to Content Analysis / april 2009 / OCWC Global Except where otherwise noted, this work is available under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License. Copyright © 2009 The Regents of the University of Michigan Garin Fons Pieter Kleymeer http://open.umich.edu http://open.umich.edu open.michigan@umich.edudu

2 a student driven do-it-yourself and distributed method of generating OER a U-M developed software used to manage the process of generating OER

3 have a look current practice copyright 106 our practice the visual guide considerations / questions

4 Carbohydrates

5 B2 -adrenergic receptor ligands

6 CT MRI

7

8 have a look current practice copyright 106 our practice the visual guide considerations / questions

9 How we look at content varies progressive use it!lose it! conservative i don’t know

10 Step 1 : Who holds the copyright to this? Step 2 : Do we have permission to use it? - If yes, use according to terms - If no, seek permission from holder, replace it with licensed content, remove content typical content analysis

11 what it boils down to / risk management / legality

12 Does this content have enough expression to merit copyright protection? new question

13 have a look current practice copyright 106 our practice the visual guide considerations / questions

14 finish this statement: The purpose of U.S. copyright law is to: a) reward authors for their creative efforts b) provide an economic incentive to write & publish c) advance public learning d) provide legal remedies for infringement

15 finish this statement: The purpose of U.S. copyright law is to: a) reward authors for their creative efforts b) provide an economic incentive to write & publish c) advance public learning d) provide legal remedies for infringement

16 purpose of copyright comes from the constitution To promote the progress of the science and useful arts, by securing for limited times to authors and inventors the exclusive right to their respective writings and discoveries; - U.S. Constitution Article 1 §8 clause 8 modified from slides by Jack Bernard

17 Means Ends reward authors provide incentive provide legal remedies promote progress modified from slides by Jack Bernard

18 basic premise Not all interesting, valuable, academically brilliant, novel, or fascinating content objects are protected by U.S. copyright law. Copyright law does not limit our use of elements of workproduct not protected by copyright law. Indeed, copyright law encourages such use.

19 U.S. copyright law does not apply to: - Facts - Information - Data - Statistics - Obvious means of selecting, arranging, and organizing facts, data and information - alphabetical, geographical, order of importance or relevance, natural sequence (time, seasonal)

20 U.S. copyright law does not apply to: - Opinions - Ideas - Concepts - Principles - Theories - Hypothesis - Algorithms - Recipes - Descriptions and Representations of a process, procedure, function, system, method of operation

21 - Citations - References - Quotations - Brief excerpts - Works created by an employee of the federal government as part of official duties U.S. copyright law does not apply to:

22 have a look current practice copyright 106 our practice the visual guide considerations / questions

23 our practice Using case law we can cut the subjective gray area of content analysis down to what the law suggests it might be. subjective objective

24 dScribe Publishin g Process roles dScribe2 dScribe instructor faculty transfers course material to dScribe dScribe attends training course led by dScribe2 dScribe identifies & documents potential IP issues Class #1 Agenda: find dScribe for open.michi gan OER team reviews & clears IP issues clear IP BY: Garin Fons, Pieter Kleymeer characters by Ryan Junell dScribe makes necessary edits to course material Class #1 Agenda: find dScribe for open.michi gan faculty reviews material: publish to U-M OER site Class #1 Agenda: find dScribe for open.michi gan publish to OER site faculty & dScribe2 connect: license material as OER faculty & dScribe2 recruit dScribe

25 dScribe cast of characters dScribeFacultydScribe2

26 license material That’s easy!

27 Class #1 Agenda: find dScribe for this course I’ll do it! select a dScribe

28 copyright open resources dScribe training course fun! decision trees

29 transfer material Class #1 Agenda: find dScribe for open.michigan

30 Class #1 Agenda: find dScribe for open.michigan Class #1 Agenda: find dScribe for open.michig an vet material OERca: Content & Decision Management Software

31 Content Processing Class #1 Agenda: find dScribe for open.michig an review material Where does this image come from? OERca: Content & Decision Management Software

32 Class #1 Agenda: find dScribe for open.michigan edit material

33 final review Class #1 Agenda: find dScribe for open.michigan Looks good!

34 publication open.michiga n Class #1 Agenda: find dScribe for open.michig an

35 have a look current practice copyright 106 our practice the visual guide considerations / questions

36 the visual guide three components: - A Tutorial :: provide non-lawyers with a basic understanding of copyright. - A List :: use case law to identify and explain why some content may not be covered by copyright. - A Mash Up :: compare potentially copyrighted content to reduce the grey area.

37 basic premise this is not an automated lawyer! this is not a substitute for thinking! this will develop one’s thinking about copyright. this will grow stronger with more content.

38 the visual guide - what’s next - Synthesize :: our workflow and the product of the law class - Pilot :: for this summer’s M1/M2 medical content - Collaborate :: with others who use similar analyses

39 have a look current practice copyright 106 our practice the visual guide considerations / questions

40 considerations - this is an intermediate step on to producing OER without closed third party content. - this is not legal advice

41 considerations - burden on the end user to make decisions and distinctions about content, to have to think about copyright within their jurisdiction. - liability associated with downstream use and distribution

42 considerations - need to do more research regarding international jurisdiction. - learn about practices within other institutions and how you deal with third party content.

43 http://open.umich.edu open.michigan@umich.edudu Garin Fons Pieter Kleymeer

44 We were made BY Ryan Junell


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