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Copyright Basics and Beyond: Licenses and Open Access

Additional Resources

Licenses

As a copyright owner, you have the option of retaining your copyright completely, selling or licensing it to another entity (eg: a publisher or distributor), or releasing it to the Public Domain. If you want to retain your rights, but not have to field requests for specific routine uses, a public license is a great way to go! There are many options for licensing your work, but one of the most popular public license is Creative Commons.

Creative Commons licenses can be applied to any type of work, and are a human- and machine-readable way to say what your work can or cannot be used for. GNU licenses act similarly but are for software and related material.

Open Access: Open Access (OA) refers to freely available, digital, online information; generally scholarly literature. Open Access scholarly literature is free of charge and often carries less restrictive copyright and licensing barriers than traditionally published works, for both the users and the authors. Although Open Access can be used to describe non-scholarly resources like Wikipedia or Khan Academy, OA is usually reserved for scholarly work.

Please remember: although OA resources are free to the user, they are not free to produce, host or develop.

Creative Commons

What is Creative Commons?

Creative Commons licenses give everyone from individual creators to large institutions a standardized way to grant the public permission to use their creative work under copyright law. From the reuser’s perspective, the presence of a Creative Commons license on a copyrighted work answers the question, “What can I do with this work?” 

For more information on the types of licenses within Creative Commons read their About CC Licenses page.

Open Access

What is Open Access?

Open access is a broad international movement that seeks to grant free and open online access to academic information, such as publications and data. A publication is defined 'open access' when there are no financial, legal or technical barriers to accessing it - that is to say when anyone can read, download, copy, distribute, print, search for and search within the information, or use it in education or in any other way within the legal agreements. 

For more detailed information on Open Access please visit Openaccess.nl

Disclaimer & CC License

Information contained on this website is educational in nature and is not to be construed as legal advice.


Creative Commons License
This guide was originally designed by Cornell University under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License