2. So what is copyright and copyleft? Is there a balance between the two?
3. Copyright “[They] own the culture that we live in, they represent the past. …For these people, ideas are intellectual property, locked up until purchased.”-Gaylor
4. Copyleft “Those who want to share ideas, those people believe that the public domain must be protected to ensure the free exchange of ideas and the future of art and culture.”-Gaylor
5. The right balance for both the “right” people and the “left” people will be to cite the borrowed work.
10. …and clearly Simon Fraser University doesn’t think so: “SFU is handing over to the copyright system various regulatory functions that could be handled, and normally are handled, by the citation system.”-Murray
11. What can be our solution? I am using The Verve’s Sweet Symphony!!!!! Happy now?
12. What can be our solution? Citation is the answer
13. Without citation, your work, with borrowed information, is a plagiarized work. Or is it a copyright infringement?
14. What are the differences? Plagiarism “…is a matter of ethics… [the] use or reuse of words without acknowledgement.”-Murray Copyright infringement “…is a matter of law…[the] use or reuse of words without permission.”-Murray
15. Plagiarism “…is a matter of etiquette, a crime against the group (the audience).”-Murray
21. Work Cited Bolter, Jay David. “The Network Culture.” Writing Space Second Edition (2001). Murray, Laura J. “The Costs of Confusion” Plagiarism and Copyright Infringement (2008) Gaylor, Brett. RiP! A Remix Manifesto." RiP! A Remix Manifesto. Web. 25 Sep 2010. <http://films.nfb.ca/rip-a-remix- manifesto/>.