Tuesday, 10 February 2015

P3

The adidas logo is from wikipedia (http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/2/20/Adidas_Logo.svg/2000px-Adidas_Logo.svg.png). In order to be able to use this image for my multimedia product, I would need to contact the company to be able to get permission for the use of the logo.



The images of the products on the clothing & shoes page are all from the adidas UK website (http://www.adidas.co.uk/). I am able to use these images in my multimedia product as they are all from the adidas website and I do not need permission to reuse the images for online use.



The images from the lookbook are from the adidas website (http://news.adidas.com/Global/Lookbooks/adidas-Originals-SS14-Men-s-LookBook/s/adfa6892-fc85-4c4d-965f-c42bf8de4927). In order to use the image in my multimedia product, I do not need to contact anyone about the use of the images as the website states; "This media asset is free for editorial broadcast, print, online and radio use".


The images of the sponsored celebrities from the clothing page are all from google (Derrick Rose - http://www.officialpsds.com/images/thumbs/Derrick-Rose-psd59288.png, Lionel Messi - http://messif50-worldcup.elverys.ie/data/general/compare-messi.png, Pharrell Williams - http://cdni.condenast.co.uk/1280x1920/o_r/Pharrell-Williams-vogue-27mar14-Shadi-Perez_b.jpg). In order to use the images for my multimedia product, I have to contact the author of each image otherwise I would be breaking the 'Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988'.



1 comment:

  1. www: the above post for P3 has clearly identified how the elements of your product’s content has been sourced. You have explained it very well P3 achieved.

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