Creative+Rights+BB


 * 1) Compare the following terms: **creative commons, commons, copyright.**
 * 2) Contrast the terms.
 * 3) Explain one way to find images that have "**commons**" rights.
 * 4) Which assignments have used **commons** images? Explain why.
 * 5) Explain in detail one way to find images that have "**creative common**" rights.
 * 6) Provide a specific example of the use of at least one **copyright** image in an assignment for this class. What were the limitations in the use of the images.


 * 1) The terms creative commons, commons, and copyright are all related. Commons means belonging to equally, which means that it belongs to everybody. If a picture is copyrighted it means only the person who put it up in the first place can change it, or make copies of it. Creative commons is a website that gives you creativity that belongs to everybody. These are all related because they all talk about a photo, and you can or cannot do with it.
 * 2) Like I said above, commons are things that belong to everybody equally, but with copyright that thing only truly belongs to one person.In creative commons none of the pictures are copyrighted because all of the pictures are common, or belonging to all.
 * 3) One way to find images that have "common" rights is to go to creative commons. There they have pictures that are too old for copyright, or that just don't have copyright at all.
 * 4) Assignments that have used common images are cropping, layers and manipulation. We used common images for these assignments because the assignment called for us to change the picture, and its illegal to change any copyrighted picture and publicize it. Since we are posting these pictures on the wiki, we are publicizing them.
 * 5) Ways to find images that have creative commons rights is to go go to CC search, click on any link that has the word images at the bottom of it. Type in the type of picture you want in the search box. And then you scroll through the listing of pictures until you find what you are looking for.
 * 6) I used a copyrighted photo for the caption assignment. My limitations with this were that I couldn't change the photo in any way, shape, or form. All I did was change the point of view by adding a caption at the bottom of it, not on the photo.