Hi Julian
I think you've had all the answers you need but this is the flow diagram I use with staff with all the relevant permissions forms within it. In my experience, if a medical image has an identifying feature within it (photo, patient number or anything), then it was easier not to use it. I think we recreated images with students etc where we could get the permissions we needed.
http://www.sicklecellanaemia.org/teaching-resources/resources/scooter1-9/SCOOTEROER9b_OER_Production_Flow_Diagram_20Jan11.htm
Best wishes
Viv
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From: Open Educational Resources [[log in to unmask]] on behalf of Julian Tenney [[log in to unmask]]
Sent: Friday, April 12, 2013 3:56 PM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Question on CC License and Reuse
Hi,
Quick question, I suspect not a quick or straightforward answer.
Situation: Academic has taken CC licensed images from flickr for use in his learning objects. They are of people. Those images are used to illustrate medical history case studies, along the lines of ‘Here’s John. He’s 87. He suffers from dementia, and began forgetting things several years ago… etc’. You could imagine cases where the example is certainly not something you’d want written next to your picture…
…I think the CC license is a different issue to the subject of the photo giving their permission for it to be used, and that the CC license doesn’t imply that permission. A rights waiver is what’s required, and CC or no CC, the rights waiver is still required?
Does anybody know definitively?
Thanks,
Julian
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