Copyright
You may intend to use additional visual material in your video to clarify the content. If you have made that material yourself, you are the owner of the work and you can include it in your videos without issue. This is different when it concerns material from others, for example images or videos that you have found on the internet. In principle, you need permission from the owner of the work. However, there are also exceptions.
- You may include parts of a work (for example, of an image, audio file or video) in your video, if intended for non-commercial use in education. You must then state the name of the author.
- Re-use must serve an educational purpose: inclusion in your knowledge clips only to make the content more attractive is not permitted.
- Authors can also indicate via a Creative Commons (CC) license that their work may be taken over. You then no longer need explicit permission. Within the Creative Commons license, the author can indicate what is and what is not permitted (for example, whether or not commercial use is allowed). Various search engines can filter results on CC licenses.
More information:
- Finding and using Copyrighted and Open Educational Resources for Open Online Education , Tom Spits, Universiteit of Groningen
- The video below from the University of Maastricht addresses Dutch copyright aw and the re-use of material from others.
Contact the organizations below if you have questions about the legal use of sources
- Videma (film and video; Dutch)
- Buma/Stemra (music)
- Pictoright (images; Dutch)
Last modified: | 26 September 2023 3.03 p.m. |
View this page in: Nederlands