Copyright Law Presentation by Kimberly Ramos All sources used follow Copyright and Fair Use guidelines in this presentation.

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Presentation transcript:

Copyright Law Presentation by Kimberly Ramos All sources used follow Copyright and Fair Use guidelines in this presentation

What is Fair Use? The Four Factor Test: Fair Use is a part of Copyright law that allows the use of copyrighted works without the owners permission. However, the user must think of the Four Factor Test when considering in determining whether or not a certain use is fair. The Four Factor Test: 1. The purpose and character of the use, including whether such use is of commercial nature or is for nonprofit educational purposes 2. The nature of the copyrighted work 3. The amount and substantiality of the portion used in relation to the copyrighted work as a whole 4. The effect of the use upon the potential market for, or value of, the copyrighted work Four Factors cited from http://guides.library.tamu.edu/content.php?pid=193253&sid=1728388

Educational Copyright Infringement What is educational copyright infringement or fair use? Materials used in educational settings and for educational purposes…. Meaning-“Educational purposes” are: noncommercial instruction or curriculum-based teaching by educators to students at nonprofit educational institutions planned noncommercial study or investigation directed toward making a contribution to a field of knowledge, or presentation of research findings at noncommercial peer conferences, workshops, or seminars. - Cited from http://fairuse.stanford.edu/overview/academic-and-educational-permissions/non-coursepack/#the_code_of_best_practices_in_fair_use_for_media_literacy_education

Rules for reproducing TEXT materials: Teachers can copy a chapter from a book, one article, a short story/essay or poem, chart, graph, diagram, drawing, cartoon, or picture from a book for an educational use BUT they must follow these guidelines… a complete poem less than 250 words or an excerpt no more than 250 words a complete article, story, or essay if less than 2,500 words or an excerpt from any prose work less than 1,000 words one chart, graph, diagram, drawing, cartoon, or picture per book or per periodical issue Teachers CAN NOT ever copy workbooks or other text materials created for standardized use. Like Teacher Pay Teacher materials. Cited from-http://fairuse.stanford.edu/overview/academic-and-educational- permissions/noncoursepack/#the_code_of_best_practices_in_fair_use_for_media_literacy_education

Rules for reproducing music and TV Teachers can copy excerpts of sheet music (no more than 10%) for educational purposes or evaluation and students may do the same for practicing purposes. Teachers cannot copy sheet music or music with the intention of creating compilations of music TV- Teachers can copy a TV show for educational use if it is used within the first ten days of copying, it must be requested by the teacher and destroyed after 45days. It may not be used repetitively in coursework over continuing courses. Cited from- http://fairuse.stanford.edu/overview/academic-and-educational-permissions/non-coursepack/#the_code_of_best_practices_in_fair_use_for_media_literacy_education

Educators, Students and Multimedia Presentations Educators and students must still adhere to the Four Factors of Copyright infringement guidelines when using YouTube, images, music and movie clips!! Images- 1-5 images may be used without permission, but more would require permission for the photographer (15 images in a compilation). OR use “labeled for re-use images!!” Music- 10% of a song or 30 second clips of a song may be used in a presentation. Compilations of music clips (less than 30 seconds each) may be used for instructional purposes. Video- 10% or 3 minutes or less of copyrighted material may be used in presentations for educational purposes. ALL information used must be placed into a bibliography and credit your sources!! **Make your own video!! Take your own pictures!! No copyright infringement there!!

Copyright Law Presentation by Kimberly Ramos Credits Thanks to- Copyright and Fair Use by Stanford University Libraries Google Images- labeled for reuse Texas A&M University Libraries Research Guides 10 Big Myths of Copyright Explained Copyright.gov NC Public Schools.org