We are happy to announce summer workshops from the Office of Scholarly Communications and Copyright. All of these workshops will take place on Zoom. These workshops are open to the Penn State University community and the public. SARI credit is available for several of these workshops. Please register in advance using the links below.
For more information about our workshop program, please visit our Workshops page. With questions, please contact us at copyright@psu.edu.
Penn State encourages qualified persons with disabilities to participate in its programs and activities. If you anticipate needing any type of accommodation or have questions about the physical access provided, please contact us at copyright@psu.edu in advance of your participation or visit.
Copyright in One Hour, June 4, 10-11 a.m., Zoom
Please register on Zoom.
This workshop provides a brief introduction to U.S. copyright law, focusing on its impact on university research and teaching. You will learn what copyright covers and how copyrighted works enter the public domain. You’ll also learn about fair use and other rights that copyright gives to people using copyrighted material. This workshop will also serve as an introduction to the Summer 2024 workshop series from the University Libraries’ Office of Scholarly Communications and Copyright. Ana Enriquez will teach this workshop. Participants will earn SARI credit.
Using the Researcher Metadata Database, June 6, 10-11 a.m., Zoom
Please register on Zoom.
In this training, you will learn how to use the Researcher Metadata Database to share your scholarly articles with the public under Penn State’s open access policy. You will also learn other options for following up with open access policy reminder emails, including uploading files in Activity Insight, providing links to open copies of your articles, or getting waivers of the policy. Ana Enriquez will teach this training.
Sharing Research Software with Open Source Licenses, June 6, 4-5 p.m., Zoom
Please register on Zoom.
Open source software development is increasingly common in many areas of academic work, however researchers who write software must balance a host of disciplinary and institutional expectations to share their code. This workshop provides an introduction to open source software licensing with particular focus on the needs of Penn State researchers. Topics include: the importance of software licenses, common open source licenses used in scientific software projects, and recommendations for navigating relevant university and funder policies. Ana Enriquez will teach this workshop. Participants will earn SARI credit.
Plagiarism and Attribution, June 18, 10-11 a.m., Zoom
Please register on Zoom.
This workshop will provide an introduction to plagiarism and attribution, including an overview of university policies related to these topics. You will learn how plagiarism differs from copyright infringement and when attribution is relevant to copyright law. You will also learn about text recycling (sometimes called “self-plagiarism”) and about plagiarism and attribution as they relate to the use of generative AI tools such as ChatGPT. Ana Enriquez will teach this workshop. Participants will earn SARI credit.
Copyright and Generative AI, June 18, 4-5 p.m., Zoom
Please register on Zoom.
This workshop will provide an introduction to copyright issues related to generative AI tools such as ChatGPT, Copilot, and Stable Diffusion. The law in this area is in flux, so we’ll study recent developments as well as relevant precedent on three questions. Are works created with generative AI tools copyrightable? Is it fair use to train a large language model on in-copyright material? And finally, is it fair use to use a generative AI tool to create a new work that is “substantially similar” to an in-copyright work? Ana Enriquez will teach this workshop. Participants will earn SARI credit.
Copyright in Three Hours, June 20, 1-4 p.m., Zoom
This workshop provides a detailed introduction to U.S. copyright law. Through a combination of prerecorded videos, small group discussion, full group discussion, and short breaks, you will learn to apply copyright law to scenarios like those that come up at Penn State, including research- and course-related uses. This workshop will go into additional detail on the topics covered in the Copyright in One Hour workshop (copyrightability, the public domain, and fair use). It will also cover additional topics, including how courts determine whether one work counts as a copy of an earlier work, who counts as the author of a copyrighted work (including jointly authored works and works made for hire), and how copyrights are licensed or transferred. This workshop is recommended for participants who want to bring together previous copyright training into a holistic understanding of U.S. copyright law. Ana Enriquez will teach this workshop.
Using Creative Commons Licensed Material, June 25, 2-3 p.m., Zoom
Please register on Zoom.
Don’t understand the difference between Creative Commons ShareAlike and NoDerivatives licenses? Aren’t sure where to find great Creative Commons licensed content? Do you want to license your content with a Creative Commons license but don’t know which one to use? Are you curious about Creative Commons licenses? Join Danielle Steinhart, Copyright Specialist, for a workshop on these and other questions. This is an interactive workshop. After an overview from Danielle, workshop participants will work in small groups to address hypothetical Creative Commons questions and then debrief their responses as a full group. Participants will earn SARI credit.
Copyright and Accessibility, June 27, 2-3 p.m., Zoom
Please register on Zoom.
Are you curious about how copyright law interacts with making copyrighted works accessible to people with disabilities? Not sure if you can remediate a pdf for readability or add captions to a video? This workshop is for you. Join Danielle Steinhart, Copyright Specialist, for a workshop on these and other questions. This is an interactive workshop. After an overview from Danielle, workshop participants will work in small groups to address hypothetical copyright questions and then debrief their responses as a full group..