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Archive | Learning Modules

These modules are designed to provide both professional and citizen journalists with step-by-step instruction on skills to help you launch or improve a web site based on user-generated content. The modules have been created by KCNN’s network of professionals.

The Journalist’s Guide to Open Government

This extensive, multimedia e-learning module helps new media makers understand how to obtain public records and get into public meetings. The guide features a unique, interactive map that tells citizens how they can locate open-government information on each of the 50 state Web sites. Produced by Geanne Rosenberg, founding chair of Baruch College’s new undergraduate Department of Journalism and the Writing Professions.

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Video Links and Copyright Concerns

Question: When using video in connection with blogs, is providing a link to video that may be protected by copyright permissible, or is that unclear, and are there any parameters or useful rules of thumb for bloggers and citizen journalists? Response By → Levine Sullivan Koch & Schulz: (Posted on January 10, 2009.) Copyright protection applies to all manner of expression once that expression is captured in a tangible form from which others (with their own senses or with the aid of a device) Read more [...]

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Proposed Federal Shield Law’s Potential Impact on Citizen Journalists

Question: Is the proposed federal shield law dead?  If it is ultimately passed, would it be helpful or hurtful to bloggers and citizen journalists? Response By → Levine Sullivan Koch & Schulz: (Posted on November 5, 2008.) No, efforts to pass a federal shield law are not dead, but they will likely have to wait until next year and the new Administration to move forward.  It is unclear whether it would help or hurt bloggers and citizen journalists. When discussing the proposed shield Read more [...]

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How Privacy Laws Pertain to Information Available on the Internet

Question: A legal claim that private facts have been wrongfully published generally requires that the facts at issue were not previously public.  Does that mean that if truthful personal information about a private person, such as financial or medical data or an ancient shoplifting arrest is posted in some obscure location on the Internet, perhaps within a database or deep inside a social networking site, that anyone can republish it without worrying about a private facts claim?  In other words, Read more [...]

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Guide To Takedown Notices And The DMCA’s Safe Harbor

Question: What is a DMCA takedown notice and what should a blogger or Web site producer do if he/she receives one? Response By → Levine Sullivan Koch & Schulz: (Posted on June 26, 2008) A DMCA “takedown notice” is formal notification that content posted on a Web site, blog, or other online forum is in violation of copyright law.  Receipt of such a notice by a “service provider”, such as a Web site operator, blogger, online forum, or other Internet-based host for third-party content, Read more [...]

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Top 10 Rules for Limiting Legal Risk

If you’re running a citizen media site or contributing to one, these 10 rules will help you avoid potential legal piftalls. Get advice in videos from Harvard Berkman Center experts and Media Law Resource Center attorneys. Module produced by Geanne Rosenberg, associate professor at City University of New York’s Graduate School of Journalism and Baruch College.

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