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In the last post of this series, Dave Davis looks at the vast domain of the YouTube video & social media platform —which, lest we forget, is a major division of Google/Alphabet — and how its copyright aspect manifests in options for individual contributors.
There is no easy fix. What is clear is that we must act now. The future of our democracy depends upon it.
Creative Commons  – a non-profit organization operating since early 2001 – released its first licenses to the public in 2002.
With both researchers and the public looking at more information than ever before, it begs the question: has scholarly reading evolved in the age of electronic information, and what does it look like?Â
RightFind customers that purchase the Wiley subscription get immediate access to Wiley’s extensive portfolio of authoritative journals directly in the RightFind workflow.
As a teacher, I developed my best lesson plans while in the shower or on the way to work: a …
Part business model, part ideology, Open Science emphasizes collaboration and transparency for research and research-related publications.
In this fourth post of the series, Dave Davis revisits the CASE Act, and, specifically, how the new Copyright Claims Board (CCB) might be of use to bloggers and podcasters in addressing circumstances where their copyrights appear to have been infringed.
CCC is pleased to announce that Catherine Zaller Rowland has joined CCC as General Counsel.
An online, self-paced course created to explain complex issues related to copyright and education in the U.S. in simple, easy-to-understand …