Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
New Media Rights is an independently funded nonprofit project under California Western School of Law, based in San Diego, USA. Its core mission is to provide legal services, educational resources, and public policy advocacy for creators, entrepreneurs, journalists, and internet users. From an education/course perspective, it is not a typical MOOC platform, but rather an open legal education resource library built around new media, intellectual property, privacy, technology law, and media law.
The website offers copyright law FAQs, the Fair Use App tool, video series, written guides, and Don’t Panic :) A Legal Guide for small businesses and creative professionals. The text also shows that it has long been involved in delivering lectures and workshops at universities, community organizations, and startup centers, as well as producing continuing legal education content for lawyers. Its content covers common legal issues faced by creators, including copyright, trademarks, contracts, privacy policies, DMCA, advertising compliance, media releases, audio/video recording, and more.
Many of its guides and educational resources are available for free. The organization sustains its operations through donations, foundation funding, membership support, and book sales. The book is available in paperback, ebook, and audiobook formats, but the scraped content does not show specific pricing. Regarding certificates, the text only mentions that it has produced continuing legal education content with ALM and Cerifi LegalEdge/West LegalEdCenter; it does not state that ordinary learners can receive a certificate after completing study materials.
Its strengths are its strong public-interest mission, clear legal-professional background, and content that closely matches the real legal risks faced by creators, small businesses, and internet projects. Its participation in policy proceedings involving bodies such as the Copyright Office and the FCC also enhances its professional credibility. Its weaknesses are that it is not highly course-oriented and lacks clear learning paths, assignments, quizzes, progress tracking, and systematic certification. The content is mainly based on U.S. law, so for Chinese users it can only serve as a comparative-law or overseas-business reference and cannot directly replace local legal advice.
It is suitable for independent creators, film/TV and YouTube producers, entrepreneurs, journalists, teachers, law students, and lawyers with strong English skills who are interested in the U.S. market. For Chinese users, it is useful for understanding the framework of U.S. copyright, fair use, privacy, and new media law. Actual compliance still needs to be assessed in combination with Chinese law and the laws of the target market. The scraped text does not provide information on access from mainland China, so its accessibility is unknown.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on newmediarights.org official site.
newmediarights.org is an United States Legal & Tax provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach newmediarights.org directly.