Professional Documents
Culture Documents
KM C Powerpoint With Bibliography
KM C Powerpoint With Bibliography
KM C Powerpoint With Bibliography
Keri McNamara CP 2
4/28/12
What is Copyright?
What types of materials are covered: The Definition of Copyright according to the US Copyright office is: Artwork
Books Copyright is a form of protection grounded in the U.S. Constitution and granted by law for original Poetry works of authorship fixed in a tangible medium of expression. Copyright covers both published and Stories unpublished works. Movies Computer Software Architecture
4/28/12
Fair Use
Determining fair use is by a simple task Fair use, as determinednot U.S. Copyright law, Title 17, Copyrights, United States Code section 107, allows for the reproduction of copyrighted material for criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching (including multiple copies for classroom use), scholarship, or research
4/28/12
4/28/12
Section 108
times have evolved and our society and archives Library exception. It allows libraries is more digital. reproduction without scrutinized. to makeIn 2004 it began to bepermission under certain circumstances. It also is the part of Libraries and archives arelibrary users to make copyright law that allows examining the issues and in 2005 put together a working group: The copies. section 108 study group To be eligible for section 108 a library must: http://www.section108.gov/ Be open to the public The Section 108 Spinner created 2010 by Michael Brewer helps determine eligibility: May make one copy as long as there is no commercial advantage has become increasing relevant the Section 108 of the Copyright law is known asas
Must post a notice above the copyright machine 4/28/12 http://www.librarycopyright.net/108spinner/ stating it is an individuals responsibility to abide
copying no more than five articles from a single journal title, not guidelines the library, dated within They created owned by to aid libraries in the past five years. completing requests while following copyright law
4/28/12
4/28/12
TEACH ACT
Section 110(2) was passed it is similar The Technology, Education and Copyright but has more restrictions. A/V known as the TEACH Harmonization Act of 2002,and dramatic musicals can is an Act of the United States Congress. Act, only be shown as clips and works need to be pared down online versus the face-face format. There are considerable stipulations for the TEACH ACT Copyright law provides educators with a separate set of rights in addition to fair use, to display (show) and perform (show or Link to a checklist to in if your media complies: play) others' workssee the classroom. These rights are in Section 110(1) of the Copyright Act http:// and apply to any work, regardless of the copyright.lib.utexas.edu/teachact.html#toolkit medium. With the advent of distance education this law needed to ammended
4/28/12
4/28/12 http://www.lib.ncsu.edu/cdsc/resources/tools
Creative Commons
With a Creative Commons license, you keep
your copyright but allow people to copy and distribute it provided they give you credit and only on the conditions you specify. first licences were distributed in 2002 works.
Creative commons was founded in 2001 and the By 2009 Estimated 350 million CC licensed
4/28/12
internet usage and social media Unintended use Internet usage and social media are affecting Licenses are non revocable libraries
Derivative works can be changed in such a way Creative Commons licenses are becoming
the original author is uncomfortable with accepted by major academic institutions, libraries, museums, and nonprofits The term non commercial is questionable
4/28/12
Minnesota A selection of free online advice for academics Public Domain Slider, Section 108 Spinner, and Fair Use Best Practices, fromLibrary Association from the American the American University Center for Social Media Tales From the Public Domain: Bound By Law? A Copyright and Fair Use, from the Stanford the comic book from public domain scholars at University Libraries School Duke University Law
Bibliography
Ed. Roman Espejo"Copyright: An Overview." Copyright Infringement. Detroit: Greenhaven Press, 2009. Opposing Viewpoints. Gale Opposing Viewpoints In Context. Web. 13 Oct. 2011. Gordon-Murnane, Laura. "CREATIVE COMMONS: Copyright Tools for the 21st Century." Online 34.1 (2010): 18-21. Library, Information Science & Technology Abstracts. EBSCO. Web. 13 Oct. 2011. Gasaway, Laura N. "Amending the copyright act for libraries and society: the Section 108 Study Group." Albany Law Review Fall 2007: 1331+. LegalTrac. Web. 13 Oct. 2011.
4/28/12