What Is Creative Commons
What Is Creative Commons
Every time a work is created, such as when a journal article is written or a photograph
taken, that work is automatically protected by copyright. Copyright protection prevents
others from using the work in certain ways, such as copying the work or putting the work
online.
CC licences allow the creator of the work to select how they want others to use the work.
When a creator releases their work under a CC licence, members of the public know what
they can and can’t do with the work. This means that they only need to seek the
creator’s permission when they want to use the work in a way not permitted by the
licence.
The great thing is that all CC licences allow works to be used for educational purposes.
As a result, teachers and students can freely copy, share and sometimes modify and
remix a CC work without having seeking the permission of the creator.
CC provides six core licences, each of which allow members of the pubic to use the
material in different ways. While there are different CC licences, all CC licences include
certain standard rights and obligations.
This information pack is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International
licence. You are free to copy, communicate and adapt the work, so long as you attribute
the ARC Centre of Excellence for Creative Industries and Innovation, the National Copyright
Unit and Creative Commons Australia. A copy of this licence is available at
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/or write to info@creativecommons.org.au.
Photos (left to right): “Teaching Math or Something” by foundphotoslj, www.flickr.com/photos/foundphotoslj/466713478; “Learning” by stefg,
www.flickr.com/photos/stefg/99303072; “Teaching” by Jacob Bøtter, www.flickr.com/photos/jakecaptive/2924964056; “telemachus: the tower, 8
a.m., theology, white/gold, heir, narrative (young)” by brad lindert, www.flickr.com/photos/bradlindert/139377645. All images licensed under a
Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic licence, .
User rights
• Copy the work (eg. download, upload, photocopy and scan the work);
• Distribute the work (eg. provide copies of the work to teachers, students,
parents and the community);
• Display or perform the work (eg. play a sound recording or film in class, or
stage a play to parents);
• Communicate the work (eg. make the work available online on the school
intranet, learning management system or on a class blog); and
• Format shift verbatim copies of the work (eg copy a MP3 version of music
onto a CD or an MP4 version of a film onto a DVD to play in class).
Some CC licences also let you make other uses, however these are the base user rights
provided for all CC material.
User obligations
• always attribute the creator of the work (for information on how to attribute
a work, see information guide, ‘How to Attribute Creative Commons
Material’);
• get permission from the creator to do anything that goes beyond the terms of
the licence (e.g. making a commercial use of the work or creating a
derivative work where the licence does not permit this);
• keep any copyright notice attached to the work intact on all copies of the
work;
• indicate and link to the licence from any copies of the work; and
• where you make changes to the work, acknowledge the original work and
indicate that changes have been made (eg by stating ‘This is a French
translation of the original work, X’).
These elements allow the creator to select the different ways they want the public to use
their work. The creator can mix and match the elements to produce the CC licence they
want. This process is a simple and quick way for creators to indicate how they wish their
work to be used.
Each element has its own icon and abbreviation, making them easy to identify. There are
four standard licence elements:
Attribution (BY)
You must credit the creator, the title and the licence the work is under. This is
compulsory for all Creative Commons licences. For more information on how to attribute
a work, see information guide, ‘How to Attribute Creative Commons Material’.
Non-commercial (NC)
Any use of the work must be for noncommercial purposes only. For example, file
sharing, educational use and film festivals are all allowed, but advertising and for-
profit uses are not.
CC is anti-copyright
CC believes in copyright and the right of creators to control the use of their work. CC just
provides voluntary tools to let creators manage their own copyright.
Teachers and CC
Although teachers can rely on statutory licences and education exceptions set out in the
Australian Copyright Act to copy and communicate material, there are very restrictive
rules dictating when a teacher is able to:
• Copy an entire work or large portions of a work;
• Modify and remix a work; and/or
• Make the work available to parents and the community.
Students and CC
Students can also benefit from using CC material in their class and homework tasks.
Students copy and communicate material under the fair dealing provisions in the
Copyright Act. These provisions are complex, making it difficult for a student to:
• Copy an entire work or large portions of a work;
• Modify and remix a work; and/or
• Make the work available to parents and the community.
If you breach the CC licence by using the work in a way not permitted by the licence,
standard copyright law applies and you may be liable for copyright infringement.
As with all works you find online, you should always be on the look out for copyright
infringement. The simple fact is that many people infringe copyright accidentally because
they do not know that they are not allowed to post material online. Creators who are
using CC licences are more copyright aware, and hence tend to make this mistake less
often. However, it is still a good idea to use your common sense. If the work contains
commercial music, television or movies you should try to contact the person who posted
the work online to ensure that they have the permission to make the work available in
that manner before you use it.
It is always important to think about what end use you want for your work at the very
beginning. If you wish to make your work available under a CC licence, you need to
decide which licence you intend to use for your work as this will determine what CC
material you can include in your work.