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Published byJean Lindsey Modified over 8 years ago
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What Teachers Need to Know
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“Foster the creation and dissemination of literary and artistic works” “Promote the Progress of Science and the useful Arts”
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Definition: Protection provided by laws of the United States for authors of original works, giving them exclusive rights to their works
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Reproduce the work in copies or recordings Prepare derivative works Distribute copies or recordings publically Perform the work publically Display the work publically
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Originally lasted 14 years Now lasts the author’s lifetime +70 years Everything created prior to 1923 is now in the public domain. http://www.librarycopyright.net/digitalslider/
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Types of works protected Literary works Musical works Dramatic works Audio visual works Pictorial and sculptural works Choreographic Works
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Look for a notice of copyright Copyright symbol Name of copyright holder Year of first publication
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Caution: after 1988 copyrighted materials are not required to display a notice of copyright Automatically applied when a work is “fixed in a copy”
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Section 107 of the Copyright Act of 1976 Allows the extension of the author’s exclusive rights for non-profit educational purposes Use is determined fair or not by considering four factors
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“Purpose and character of the use” “The Nature of the copyrighted material” Amount and proportion of the work used in relation to the work as a whole The potential effect on the market value of the work
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Purpose and Character No commercial purpose Educational purposes by nonprofit institutions Nature Directly supports course content Effect on Market value Must not lower potential market May not use copying as a substitute for buying
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Amount for reproduction 10% or 100,000 words of a prose piece 250 words of a poem One chapter of a book One journal article A visual image in its entirety, but no more than 5 per artist 10% or 3 minutes of a film
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One copy may be made per student Copying must not substitute for purchasing an original copy Time must not allow a request for permission Must not exceed lengths previously stated
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Shown at a nonprofit institution Directly supports course content Show legitimate copies Must be a part of instruction Occur in a regular room of instruction Attendance limited to those normally in class No fees charged to watch
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TEACH Act Allows use without prior consent Allowed further privileges to Distance Educators Sets limitations Privileges Allows use of audiovisual and musical works Allows student access at any computer Allows “digitizing” of material
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Limitations Available for limited time Available only to class members Limited portions Use of materials marketed for educational purposes require obtaining permission
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$750 per infringement is minimum fine Up to $250,000 per infringement for willful violators Up to 5 years in jail for willful violators
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http://home.earthlink.net/~cnew/research.htm http://home.earthlink.net/~cnew/research.htm
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