Showing 1,521 - 1,540 results of 1,548 for search '"Creative Commons license"', query time: 0.10s Refine Results
  1. 1521

    Sharing works and copyright issues in massive open online courseware (MOOC) by Wahid, Ratnaria, Mohd Sani, Azizuddin, Mat, Bakri, Subhan, Muhammad, Saidin, Khaliza

    Published 2015
    “…It is necessary to have clear awareness on the copyright issues and to understand what strategy could be used to provide a secure and positive MOOC environment.This paper is aimed at identifying and explaining the relationship between works sharing and copyright issues in MOOC environment.The paper highlighted strategies that can be undertaken by someone who want to share their works that fall under the public domain, creative common licenses and open access repositories.…”
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    Article
  2. 1522

    Sharing works and copyright issues in massive open online courseware (MOOC) by Wahid, Ratnaria, Mohd Sani, Azizuddin, Mat, Bakri, Subhan, Muhammad, Saidin, Khaliza

    Published 2015
    “…The paper highlighted strategies that can be undertaken by someone who want to share their works that fall under the public domain, creative common licenses and open access repositories…”
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    Article
  3. 1523

    Finding the Right Platform by Corinne Guimont, Cheryl E. Ball, Matt Vaughn

    Published 2024-01-01
    “…We walk readers through how to use this Creative-Commons-licensed tool to compare platforms, features, and project types, with the hopes that users (be they librarians or authors) can easily compare and make decisions about which platform might best suit their publishing needs. …”
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    Article
  4. 1524

    Copyright Essentials for Linguists by Paul Newman

    Published 2007-06-01
    “…Questions 6-8 explain licenses, especially Creative Commons licenses, and the function of an Author's Addendum. …”
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    Article
  5. 1525

    BEASTling: A software tool for linguistic phylogenetics using BEAST 2. by Luke Maurits, Robert Forkel, Gereon A Kaiping, Quentin D Atkinson

    Published 2017-01-01
    “…By taking advantage of Creative Commons-licensed data from the Glottolog language catalog, BEASTling allows the user to conveniently filter datasets using names for recognised language families, to impose monophyly constraints so that inferred language trees are backward compatible with Glottolog classifications, or to assign geographic location data to languages for phylogeographic analyses. …”
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    Article
  6. 1526

    COPYRIGHT LITERACY AND OPEN LICENSE ATTRIBUTION AS SCHOLARLY PRACTICE by Connie Blomgren

    Published 2023-07-01
    “…There are also tensions involved with properly attributing Creative Commons licenses and the title, author, source, and license process offers an imperfect and sometimes complicated pathway forward. …”
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    Article
  7. 1527

    Assessing the Potential Toward Open Educational Practices in Kyrgyzstan by Anita R Walz, Jyldyz Bekbalaeva

    Published 2018-04-01
    “…This study aimed to identify current teaching practices and learning resource usage practices, gauge levels of knowledge regarding Kyrgyzstan’s Copyright law, Creative Commons licenses, and Open Educational Resources, and investigate perceptions regarding potential roles for libraries in enabling others’ learning regarding Copyright and Creative Commons, and open educational resources. …”
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    Article
  8. 1528

    Assessing the Potential Toward Open Educational Practices in Kyrgyzstan by Anita R Walz, Jyldyz Bekbalaeva

    Published 2018-04-01
    “…This study aimed to identify current teaching practices and learning resource usage practices, gauge levels of knowledge regarding Kyrgyzstan’s Copyright law, Creative Commons licenses, and Open Educational Resources, and investigate perceptions regarding potential roles for libraries in enabling others’ learning regarding Copyright and Creative Commons, and open educational resources. …”
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    Article
  9. 1529

    Editors' note: On rent extraction in academic publishing and its alternatives by Tuomas Tammisto, Heikki Wilenius

    Published 2023-02-01
    “…In addition we discuss open access developments of the journal, namely our new license policy, which allows authors to choose a Creative Common license that best suits their needs or the requirements of their funders. …”
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    Article
  10. 1530

    Geo Shared Licenses by Frederika Welle Donker, Bastiaan van Loenen, Jaap Zevenbergen

    Published 2016-12-01
    “…This paper explores the current PSGI licences to assess the actual restrictions and how current obstacles can be levelled. The Creative Commons licensing concept was explored and adapted to make it suitable for licensing PSGI. …”
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    Article
  11. 1531

    SCOPE: A Scientific Compound Object Publishing and Editing System by Kwok Cheung, Jane Hunter, Anna Lashtabeg, John Drennan

    Published 2008-12-01
    “…SCOPE extends the Provenance Explorer tool and GUI by: 1) Adding an embedded web browser that can be used for incorporating objects discoverable via the Web; 2) Representing compound objects as Named Graphs, that can be saved in RDF, TriX, TriG or as an Atom syndication feed; 3) Enabling scientists to attach Creative Commons Licenses to the compound objects to specify how they may be re-used; 4) Enabling compound objects to be published as Fedora Object XML (FOXML) files within a Fedora digital library.…”
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    Article
  12. 1532

    SCOPE: A Scientific Compound Object Publishing and Editing System by Kwok Cheung, Jane Hunter, Anna Lashtabeg, John Drennan

    Published 2008-12-01
    “…SCOPE extends the Provenance Explorer tool and GUI by: 1) Adding an embedded web browser that can be used for incorporating objects discoverable via the Web; 2) Representing compound objects as Named Graphs, that can be saved in RDF, TriX, TriG or as an Atom syndication feed; 3) Enabling scientists to attach Creative Commons Licenses to the compound objects to specify how they may be re-used; 4) Enabling compound objects to be published as Fedora Object XML (FOXML) files within a Fedora digital library.…”
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    Article
  13. 1533

    SCOPE: A Scientific Compound Object Publishing and Editing System by Kwok Cheung, Jane Hunter, Anna Lashtabeg, John Drennan

    Published 2008-12-01
    “…SCOPE extends the Provenance Explorer tool and GUI by: 1) Adding an embedded web browser that can be used for incorporating objects discoverable via the Web; 2) Representing compound objects as Named Graphs, that can be saved in RDF, TriX, TriG or as an Atom syndication feed; 3) Enabling scientists to attach Creative Commons Licenses to the compound objects to specify how they may be re-used; 4) Enabling compound objects to be published as Fedora Object XML (FOXML) files within a Fedora digital library.…”
    Get full text
    Article
  14. 1534

    SCOPE: A Scientific Compound Object Publishing and Editing System by Kwok Cheung, Jane Hunter, Anna Lashtabeg, John Drennan

    Published 2008-12-01
    “…SCOPE extends the Provenance Explorer tool and GUI by: 1) Adding an embedded web browser that can be used for incorporating objects discoverable via the Web; 2) Representing compound objects as Named Graphs, that can be saved in RDF, TriX, TriG or as an Atom syndication feed; 3) Enabling scientists to attach Creative Commons Licenses to the compound objects to specify how they may be re-used; 4) Enabling compound objects to be published as Fedora Object XML (FOXML) files within a Fedora digital library.…”
    Get full text
    Article
  15. 1535

    SCOPE: A Scientific Compound Object Publishing and Editing System by Kwok Cheung, Jane Hunter, Anna Lashtabeg, John Drennan

    Published 2008-12-01
    “…SCOPE extends the Provenance Explorer tool and GUI by: 1) Adding an embedded web browser that can be used for incorporating objects discoverable via the Web; 2) Representing compound objects as Named Graphs, that can be saved in RDF, TriX, TriG or as an Atom syndication feed; 3) Enabling scientists to attach Creative Commons Licenses to the compound objects to specify how they may be re-used; 4) Enabling compound objects to be published as Fedora Object XML (FOXML) files within a Fedora digital library.…”
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    Article
  16. 1536

    Virtual simulation in healthcare education: a multi-professional, pan-Canadian evaluation by Margaret Verkuyl, Efrem Violato, Nicole Harder, Theresa Southam, Mélanie Lavoie-Tremblay, Sandra Goldsworthy, Wendy Ellis, Suzanne H. Campbell, Lynda Atack

    Published 2024-01-01
    “…Evaluation was important since the virtual simulations are freely available through creative commons licensing, to the global healthcare community. …”
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    Article
  17. 1537

    Slovenske znanstvene revije v letu 2021 / Slovenian scientific journals in 2021 by Aleš Pogačnik

    Published 2022-04-01
    “…Half of them use Creative Commons licenses, about the same number of them (mostly the same journals) also use DOI (Digital Object Identifier), one third of journals use OJS (Open Journal System) and a handful (4.1%) also publish in one of the XML formats. …”
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  18. 1538

    Privacy-Aware Visualization of Volunteered Geographic Information (VGI) to Analyze Spatial Activity: A Benchmark Implementation by Alexander Dunkel, Marc Löchner, Dirk Burghardt

    Published 2020-10-01
    “…A specific use case demonstration is provided, based on a global, publicly-available dataset that contains 100 million photos shared by 581,099 users under Creative Commons licenses. Both the data processing pipeline and resulting dataset are made available, allowing transparent benchmarking of the privacy–utility tradeoffs.…”
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    Article
  19. 1539
  20. 1540

    HLA-A*68: 02-restricted Gag-specific cytotoxic T lymphocyte responses can drive selection pressure on HIV but are subdominant and ineffective by Kløverpris, H, Stryhn, A, Harndahl, M, Carlson, J, Leslie, A, Chen, F, Riddell, L, Mulenga, J, Walker, B, Ndung'U, T, Buus, S, Goulder, P

    Published 2013
    “…However, these data suggest the potential for high frequency vaccineinduced Gag responses restricted by this allele to have significant antiviral efficacy in vaccine recipients. © 2013 Creative Common License.…”
    Journal article