ASDSO Dam Safety Toolbox

Media and Copyright Policies and Guidelines: Difference between revisions

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Copyright definition: "The exclusive legal right, given to an originator or an assignee to print, publish, perform, film, or record literary, artistic, or musical material, and to authorize others to do the same."<ref name="Oxford">Oxford Language, 2022</ref>
Copyright definition: "The exclusive legal right, given to an originator or an assignee to print, publish, perform, film, or record literary, artistic, or musical material, and to authorize others to do the same."<ref name="Oxford">Oxford Language, 2022</ref>


All references, direct quotes, information sources, and images that are used in the Dam Safety Toolbox should be correctly cited. References should include the title, author, and year of publication. Content in the Dam Safety Toolbox that is not an ASDSO publication must adhere to applicable copyright law such as the Copyright Act of 1976. Publicly available documents such as those published on website of federal and state agencies may be uploaded to the Dam Safety Toolbox to allow users to download and view them. "Works in the public domain are those that are never protected by copyright (like facts or discoveries) or works whose term of protection has ended either because it expired or the <noautolinks>owner</noautolinks> did not satisfy a previously required formality. Currently, all pre-1926 U.S. works are in the public domain because copyright protection has expired for those works."<ref name="copyright.gov">copyright.gov, 2022</ref> Images used for the Dam Safety Toolbox should also adhere to the Media and Copyright Policy. Images should be taken from public domain repositories such as [https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Main_Page Wikimedia Commons]. All content should be correctly cited, following the information outlined in the [[Guidelines for Inserting a Citation]].
All references, direct quotes, information sources, and images that are used in the Dam Safety Toolbox should be correctly cited. References should include the title, author, and year of publication. Content in the Dam Safety Toolbox that is not an ASDSO publication must adhere to applicable copyright law such as the Copyright Act of 1976. Publicly available documents such as those published on website of federal and state agencies may be uploaded to the Dam Safety Toolbox to allow users to download and view them. "Works in the public domain are those that are never protected by copyright (like facts or discoveries) or works whose term of protection has ended either because it expired or the <noautolinks>owner</noautolinks> did not satisfy a previously required formality. Currently, all pre-1926 U.S. works are in the public domain because copyright protection has expired for those works."<ref name="copyright.gov">copyright.gov, 2022</ref> Images used for the Dam Safety Toolbox should also adhere to the Media and Copyright Policy. Images should be taken from public domain repositories such as [https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Main_Page Wikimedia Commons].  
 
All content should be correctly cited, following the information outlined in the [[Guidelines for Inserting a Citation]].


{{Citations}}
{{Citations}}

Revision as of 05:10, 23 December 2022


Copyright definition: "The exclusive legal right, given to an originator or an assignee to print, publish, perform, film, or record literary, artistic, or musical material, and to authorize others to do the same."[1]

All references, direct quotes, information sources, and images that are used in the Dam Safety Toolbox should be correctly cited. References should include the title, author, and year of publication. Content in the Dam Safety Toolbox that is not an ASDSO publication must adhere to applicable copyright law such as the Copyright Act of 1976. Publicly available documents such as those published on website of federal and state agencies may be uploaded to the Dam Safety Toolbox to allow users to download and view them. "Works in the public domain are those that are never protected by copyright (like facts or discoveries) or works whose term of protection has ended either because it expired or the owner did not satisfy a previously required formality. Currently, all pre-1926 U.S. works are in the public domain because copyright protection has expired for those works."[2] Images used for the Dam Safety Toolbox should also adhere to the Media and Copyright Policy. Images should be taken from public domain repositories such as Wikimedia Commons.

All content should be correctly cited, following the information outlined in the Guidelines for Inserting a Citation.


Citations:

  1. Oxford Language, 2022
  2. copyright.gov, 2022