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Duly Quoted

I would have written a shorter letter, but I did not have the time.
-- Blaise Pascal


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Tom Christensen
("xensen") . tom [at] rightreading.com
 

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Top 16 Currently Popular Pages

updated 9/20/2008

1 How to Get a Book Published
2 Persian Ceramics
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4 Creative barcodes from Japan
5 Taoism and the Arts of China
6 The digital divide
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10 Glossary of Book Publishing Terms
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Creative Commons

flickr cc

If you will glance down at the footer on this page (or follow the “about” or “policies” links) you will see that I have replaced my copyright notices with creative commons ones. I’m hardly a leader in this — as a guy who has worked in book publishing for many years I have had the notion of copyright deeply ingrained. And there remain a few pieces, like my article on Gutenberg and the Koreans for example, that need to remain under copyright because of publishing arrangements.

But as a blogger I know that people want and need materials they can use readily and with a minimum of fuss. If I want this for myself, why should I deny it to others? Information, it is said, wants to be free, and I don’t want to be the one to enslave it.

Creative Commons is especially helpful when you need an image to accompany something you’re writing about. Flickr makes this wonderfully easy. By going to http://www.flickr.com/creativecommons/ you can search for photos that have been uploaded with a CC license. As a photo user I would always start there and only go through the hassle of contacting owners of copywrited photos if really necessary. As you can see from the Flickr CC search page, CC licenses have several flavors:

  • Attribution License
  • Attribution-NoDerivs License
  • Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs License
  • Attribution-NonCommercial License
  • Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike License
  • Attribution-ShareAlike License

I’m not sure which is best — there are arguments for each, I suppose — but I chose Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs, in part because this was the most popular among Flickr users, so it’s probably where the majority of the searches will occur. (Is this the best choice? Let me know your thoughts.)

There are a few websites that automate Flickr CC searches, including:

Behold seems to apply some kind of quality filter to search results. FlickCC lets you browse through thumbnails, at 36 to the page. A screenshot from this site is shown above.

There is also a WordPress plugin called PhotoDropper that lets you search for Flickr CC photos from within the WordPress dashboard. Once a photo is selected it will automatically insert the photo along with any required credit. Cool, but I have not installed it because it sounds like your ability to format the results is limited.

Finally, I would like to see the CC logo — which looks like a copyright symbol but with two cees rather than one — become a standard glyph in fontsets.

creative commons loog

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Comments

Comment from Nancy
Time: February 25, 2008, 11:03 am

I’m glad to see that you use common sense with regards to copyright. When I read some other sites - this one comes to mind (http://www.plagiarismtoday.com/), I am concerned about where the ever narrowing definitions will take us. Of course, I’m not advocating taking without authorization or attribution but the boundaries are becoming ever tighter with, I believe, the ultimate goal of getting money out of every period, comma and semi-colon.

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