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- 82 - CHAPTER 4

FIGURE 4.9 CC Smoothie

Author: Nate Angell | CC BY
Derivative of “Strawberry Smoothie on Glass Jar” by Element5
(pexels.com/photo/strawberry-smoothie-on-glass-jar-775032/)
in the public domain, and various Creative Commons license icons
by Creative Commons
(https://creativecommons.org/about/downloads)
used under CC BY.

Desaturated from original

  1. Like a TV dinner (figure 4.10), a collection groups different works together; however, a collection keeps them organized as distinct and separate objects. An example of a collection would be a book that consists of a group of essays from different sources, or by different authors.
When you create a collection, you must provide attribution and licensing information about each of the individual works in that collection. This gives the public the information they need to understand who created what and which license terms apply to specific content. You can revisit section 4.1 “Choosing and Applying a CC License” to learn how to properly indicate the copyright status of third-party works that you incorporate into your new work.
When you combine material into a collection, you may have a separate copyright of your own that you may license. However, your copyright

FIGURE 4.10 CC TV Dinner

Author: Nate Angell | CC BY
Derivative of “tv dinner 1” by adrigu (https://flic.kr/p/6AMLDF) under CC
BY, and various Creative Commons license icons by Creative Commons
(https://creativecommons.org/about/downloads) used under CC BY.

Desaturated from original