Recall from Tuesday’s post that Creative Commons licensing allows creators to grant others permission to use their media freely. Media can be illustrations, photos, videos, sounds and more – all of which have many purposes within education.
It can be difficult to determine if a video, song, or "googled" image has been posted with permission. Therefore, start with the following Creative Commons portals instead:
- Wikimedia Commons – a collection of 45 million freely usable visual and audio media files to which anyone can contribute
- Flickr Commons – hidden treasures from the world's public photography archives
- ccMixter – music database that features sound effects and remixed music
- reveal.js – open software that challenges the Office suite paradigm is hard to find.
- Vimeo and YouTube – use the search filter settings to limit results to only Creative Commons videos.
Want to learn more?
Visit the Humber Library’s copyright website, library.humber.ca/copyright, for links to more open media resources.
Stay tuned for the conclusion to the Open Education Week series.