Copyright guidelines and restrictions on all these cool new Infographics, maps and stuff
Just exploring the new capabilities of Biblical Places, Things and all the media resources in L4.
Very big development for teachers.
I love having the ability to so easily place these resources in Powerpoint for presentations.
Just curious if there are any guidelines or restrictions for using these media resources on blogs as still images or in screencasts? Also curious if there are any restrictions on using them on broadcast television?
I would assume that for things copyrighted by Logos, it would at least be necessary to give proper attribution but wondered if that was all that is necessary?
I noticed that images from other resources also have capabilities to be copied to clipboard or saved as a file. Is it necessary to contact each publisher for copyright permissions or has some sort of blanket arrangement been established?
Thanks,
Russ
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Very good questions.
In Beta testing, I posed the question whether it would be possible, in saving the file, to have information concerning its origin written into the file metadata... Don't know if anyone heard that question.
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You can use the Logos-copyrighted content, people diagrams, and maps in your presentations, handouts, teaching, etc. (One of the reasons we created them -- to make sure we had clear rights we could pass on to you.)
The only restriction right now is that you need to get permission to re-publish them -- in a book, for example.
We'll be making more details available soon.
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I write for HubPages. Would it be appropriate to use some of your art and diagrams with them? Check out http://liftandsoar.hubpages.com/ for samples of what I'm talking about. Thanks Frank
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I just got questioned at a copy center whether I had rights to print a logos map. They wanted proof. Is there a place where I can find that information from Logos?
Thanks -
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"If myth is ideology in narrative form, then scholarship is myth with footnotes." B. Lincolm 1999.
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Thanks - As to my whereabouts could be somewhere in Arabia -
How have you been doing Denise?
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Been doing great! Summer rains arrived. Happy trees.
Arabia, huh? Hmm. Roman Arabia ... that’d be Jordan. Or just geographic ‘Arabia‘. Or the Kingdom. Hmmm.
Bet we’re more toasty.
"If myth is ideology in narrative form, then scholarship is myth with footnotes." B. Lincolm 1999.
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