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Digital Citizenship

Netiquette

QuestionAnswer
Creative Commons A license that lets you decide how others may use your work. The license allows you to keep your copyright but also allow others to copy and distribute your work provided they give you credit and only on the conditions you specify.
Digital identity/footprint All of the information online about a person either posted by that person or others, intentionally or unintentionally.
Fair use The idea that copyright material may be quoted without the need for permission from or payment to the original source, provided that a citation is clearly given and that the material quoted is reasonably brief.
Listserve An online list that allows users to send e-mail to one address, where messages are then copied and sent to all of the people on the list.
Intellectual property It includes art, books, inventions, magazines, movies, music, performances, reports, software, stories created by you or by others.
Media literacy The ability to access, analyze, evaluate and create media in a variety of forms.
Netiquette Courtesy, honesty, and polite behavior practiced on the Internet - key component of digital citizenship.
Open source Programming code with limited or no copyright restrictions, allowing you to legally modify and share the software program.
Flame A deliberately mean-spirited message sent to others on the Internet.
Upstander Someone who takes action to stop bullying behavior or other inappropriate behaviors.
Grooming Techniques used by child predators to try to gain your trust.
Hacker Someone who accesses computer information without permission.
Cyberbullying The use of digital media tools such as the Internet and cell phones to deliberately and repeatedly hurt, harass, or embarrass someone else.
Created by: ancakin
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