30 - 40 minute presentation on the changes in media production and distribution which have led to the development of Creative Commons.
Presentation licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 New Zealand Licence, however please note the images each have their own individual licence, as shown.
First presented by Holly Grover on March 14, 2013, to a Wellington Girls' College Year 13 (final year in high school) Media Studies class.
As the presentation is largely visual, I have uploaded my speaking notes here:
www.slideshare.net/htgrover/slide-notes-changes-in-media-production-and-distribution-which-have-led-to-the-development-of-creative-commons
Thanks to Di Henjyoji and Matt McGregor for their encouragement!
6. The Public Domain
Image: Romeo és Júlia, Gink Károly, Magyar Királyi Operaház / Magyar Állami Operaház, 1950, Országos
Színháztörténeti Múzeum és Intézet (Hungarian Theatre Museum and Institute).
9. Technological Revolution #2:
Telegraph &
Telephone
Image: Telephoning from the exhibition: Schoolchildren at the Post and Telegraph Department’s court, Auckland
Weekly News, 15 Nov. 1939, Sir George Grey Special Collections, Auckland Libraries, AWNS-19391115-39-5
10. Image: A Royal Air Force cameraman working with an oblique
camera, Evening Post, 1 March 1941, from Papers Past
Technological Revolution #3:
Recorded
Media
14. “I say to you that the VCR
is to the American film
producer and the American
public as the Boston
strangler is to the woman
home alone.”
Jack Valenti, former President of the Motion Picture
Association of America, giving testimony in front of
the U.S. Congress in 1982
28. Image: Culture Always Builds on the Past, licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-Share Alike
3.0 New Zealand. Remixed by Holly Grover, based on the works used in an earlier version of this presentation:
Disney, Miss Kels; Romeo és Júlia, Gink Károly; Rip! A Remix Manisfesto, colindunn; Featherbed Alley Printshop
Bermuda, Aodhdubh; Telephoning from the exhibition, Auckland Weekly News, Sir George Grey Special Collections,
Auckland Libraries, AWNS-19391115-39-5; A Royal Air Force cameraman working with an oblique camera, Evening Post,
Papers Past; Rocky Hall, Radio Foxton, Foxton Historical Society, Kete Horowhenua; (Portrait of a man with camera),
Geoff W Perry, Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki; Sony Betamax 1978, Nesster; DJ Hypnotize and Baby Cee DJ'ing,
D.L.; Cookin’ Soul Vol 1 (New York Times), Julius – Laid Back; Binary, Brett Jordan; www.icanhascheezburger.com;
Napster, Bixentro.
29. References
Free To Mix Guide, Creative Commons
Aotearoa New Zealand, CC-BY
Creative Commons for Schools, Matt
McGregor, CC-ANZ, CC-BY
How Social Media Can Make History,
Clay Shirky, TED.com
Font:
Alte Hass Grotesk, by Yann Le Coroller
Find CC content
Images:
flickr.com/creativecommons
Music:
jamendo.com/en/search
ccmixter.org/
Video:
youtube.com/creativecommons
vimeo.org/creativecommons
Everything:
search.creativecommons.org
commons. wikimedia.org