User talk:Margaret

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Activity 1.1 Feedback

Dear Margaret,
Here is some feedback with regard to Activit 1:
When you write "OER has been recognized as an international community of learning where anyone wishing to use them for learning purposes has access which is unlimited from any part of the world." Just to be sure: OER are resources which are publicly shared. Those who share, contribute, reuse, etc. form a community process wise but content wise it is rather a myriad of small communities concerned with a given content who will interact.
In the retain, rather than saying "become yours" I would say "becomes your copy".
In the redistribute, it is an ability as you say but it is also a mindset, i.e. be willing to redistribute.
It would be a good idea to add the resources you have worked with to come up with your own understanding of the five R. You can just add them at the bottom :)

Re: Activity 1.1 Feedback -- Margaret (talk) 10:15, 13 May 2022 (CEST)

Dear Brabara, i have reviewed this work, Please check it out

Activity 1.2 Feedback

You mention copyright law, which is fully correct but remember also the principle of copyleft behind the CC licences project. I guess there is a mismatch between the presentation of licences and the introduction, "discussed here below from the least permissive": CC 0 is indeed the most permissive but then comes the CC BY and the following ones you have mentioned.
As in the previous feedback: please add references!

Re: Activity 1.2 Feedback -- Margaret (talk) 10:16, 13 May 2022 (CEST)

i have also reviewed the activity, kindly check it out

Activity 1.3 Feedback

Your activity is very interesting because you revisit the UNHCR convention from the perspective of OER (content and licence). Since this is a convention, i.e. a legal document, I do not know to what extent CC licences are actually applicable. On their website, there is not any mention with regard to CC licences. I will ask because this is really a challenging question, i.e. to what extent can CC licences be applied to legal documents and international conventions.
Just a small comment: be careful to be very precise. When you write "Creative common on the other hand is concerned with how individuals or institutions can be licensed under the copyright law to use OERs/creative works." It is the resources produced by individuals or institutions that can be licenced.
Great that for this activity, you have added references :)


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Re: Activity 1.3 Feedback -- Margaret (talk) 10:26, 13 May 2022 (CEST)

True, kindly check to what extent CC licenses can be applied to international convections and other legal instruments. This will also be interesting for me to know. I have rectified the the error on 'individual licences' rather than licenses for materials

Thanks for the feedback.