1. NET
Netiquette / t-É-kÉt/, Noun: 1. The social code of
network communication. 2. The social and moral
code of the internet based on the human condition
and Golden Rule of Netiquette. 3. A philosophy of
effective internet communication that utilizes
common conventions and norms as a guide for
rules and standards.
2. Your
Responsibilitiesďś Keep otherâs feelings in mind
ďś If your feelings get hurt stay CALM
ďś Respect otherâs privacy
ďś Donât abuse your power
ďś Donât waste other peoples time
ďś Make yourself look positive
ďś Pretend to be face to face
4. You should care because
⢠You would not want the poem you wrote to your
girlfriend be credited to another boy
⢠You would not want another student taking
credit for the artwork you created in art class
Copyright laws insures your work to
be yours! It prevents people from
taking it and making it into
5. Works that are protected
by Copyright
⢠literary works
⢠musical works
⢠dramatic works
⢠pantomimes and choreographic works
⢠pictorial, graphic, and sculptural works
⢠motion pictures and other audiovisual works
⢠sound recordings
⢠architectural works
6. Works that are not protected
by Copyright
⢠Ideas, procedures, methods, systems, processes,
concepts, principles, discoveries, or devices
⢠Titles, names, short phrases, and slogans; mere
listings of ingredients or contents
⢠Works that are not fixed in a tangible form of
expression
⢠Works consisting entirely of information that is
commonly available and contains no originality
⢠Works by the US government
7. Fair Use
Fair use is a limitation and
exception to the exclusive right
granted by copyright law to
the author of a creative work.
8. When Fair Use is Used
⢠News Reporting
⢠Criticism
⢠Research
⢠Teachers Use in a classroom
The Golden Rule: Only take from someone else
what you would not mind them taking from
you.
9. pla¡gia¡rism pley-juh-riz-uhm
noun 1. an act or instance of using or
closely imitating the language and
thoughts of another author without
authorization and the representation of
that author's work as one's own, as by
not crediting the original author.
10. ⢠Receiving credit for someone elseâs work
⢠Copying words or ideas without giving the source
credit
⢠Not using quotations
⢠Using the same sentence
structure but changing the
words and not giving credit
⢠Copying words and using ideas for the majority of
your work even if you gave the source credit
11. ⢠Make an outline with a balance of
your ideas and your sources
⢠Take good notes by citing all your
sources as you begin your research
⢠Know how to cite sources correctly
12. Safety on the WEB
âInternet safety is about avoiding being
ripped off, disrespected, bullied,
scammed, or stalked while youâre just
trying to have a good time online,â states
the Washington State Office of the
Attorney General website.
13. You are a Target
⢠Anything you post on the web can be sold to
someone who is interested
⢠You can be bullied
⢠Someone can take credit for your work
⢠Denied a job opportunity
⢠Steal your identity
14. Respect Yours and
Your Friends Privacy
⢠Even if you want your picture posted your
friend might not.
⢠Beware that a conversation online may be
available to others.
⢠Just because you set your social networking to
private you still have a lot of information
available to stalkers
⢠Always have your parents permission to be
online
15. Safety on your Computer
⢠Install and keep an antivirus up-to-date
⢠Beware of what you download
⢠Viruses may be sent through Emails
⢠Restrict Administration Access
⢠Backup your computer
16. Passwords
⢠Passwords easy to hack are:
⢠Phrases like Iloveyou
⢠123456
⢠Safest Password include
⢠An uppercase letter
⢠A lowercase letter
⢠At least one digit
⢠One symbol
⢠12 characters
17. References
The Core Rules of Netiquette. (2011). Retrieved August 17, 2013, from
http://www.albion.com/netiquette/corerules.html
Retrieved August 17, 2013, from http://networketiquette.net/
Boston Public Library. (2001). Netiquette for Kids. Retrieved from
http://www.bpl.org/kids/learn/netiquette-for-kids/
Retrieved August 17, 2013. Netiquette image.
http://www.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://roverarts.com/
Welcome Copyright Kids! (2007). Retrieved from http://www.copyrightkids.org/
Merriam Webster. (2013). Retrieved from
http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/copyright
Dictionary.com. (2013). Retrieved from
http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/plagiarism
Plagirism.org. (2013). Retrieved from
http://www.plagiarism.org/plagiarism-101/what-is-plagiarism
18. Washington State Office of the Attorney General. (2008). Retrieved from
http://www.atg.wa.gov/InternetSafety/Teens.aspx#.UhgUg50o5dh
Romero, Ric. (2011, September 20). How safe are your computer passwords?
Retrieved from http://abclocal.go.com/kabc/story?id=8361856
Pantic, Mitz. 10 Top Safety Computer Tips. Retrieved from
http://tips4pc.com/top_10_computer_tips/10-top-safety-computer-tips.htm
The Fair Use Rule: When Use of Copyright Material is Acceptable. (2013).
http://www.nolo.com/legal-encyclopedia/fair-use-rule-copyright-material-
30100.html
Wikipedia. (2013, August 21). Retrieved from
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fair_use