Online Database of Social Media Policies

I recently came across this impressive online database of social media policies, which includes over 100 policies from several different industries. The nonprofit and government section includes examples from both large and small nonprofits and government agencies. For more information on crafting a social media policy for your organization, check out thisrecent post on NTEN’s blog and this white paper on Social Media, Risk, and Policies for Associations. -M

Aviary Online Image Editor Now Free

Aviary, a robust online image editor that used to cost $24.99 a year for the full version, is now available for free. According co-founder Michael Galpert, a "recent round of funding (by Spark Capital, Bezos Expeditions & others) enables [Aviary] to finally achieve this goal." The full announcement is available here. -M

Nevada Partners Create Bankruptcy How-To Videos

For over 10 years, the Legal Aid Center of Southern Nevada and the William S. Boyd School of Law at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas have partnered to teach community education classes covering several areas of law for the public. In order to extend their reach, the law school and legal aid program collaborated with their local PBS affiliate Vegas PBS to record one of their bankruptcy classes. Now this class is available to everyone on YouTube in seven short segments. - K

Creative Commons Licensing and Writing Attributions Correctly

Creative Commons is "a nonprofit dedicated to making it easier for people to share and build upon the work of others, consistent with the rules of copyright." They provide six free licenses that you can use to license your creations:

A while ago, Hugh Calkins asked whether the legal aid community should be licensing its community and self-help materials under Creative Commons licenses in his posts Creative Commons and I Get All the News I Need on the Boing Boing blog (Episode II).The legal aid community seems to be slowing warming to these licenses. Technola is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 License, and the LSNTAP website is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.5 License.

Personally, I really appreciate Creative Commons licenses, especially when I'm looking for a picture to add to a presentation or post. Flickr, an image-sharing site, lets you search for Creative Commons-licensed content, which means that I can quickly find pictures that I can use without violating copyright. However, I struggle with how to comply with the attribution requirements of the license. Recently, I came across a great post, How to write attributions for the Creative Commons licensed images you use on your blog from In Propria Persona, that sets out guidelines to follow: add the label "[title] by [person], used under a Creative Commons [license type] license" with links as appropriate. A great, simple way to comply.

Have you been using Creative Commons licenses to license your content? Have you been using Creative Commons-licensed content? What have you been doing to comply with the attribution requirement of the license? - K