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Empowering Access Through Understanding Copyright Bobby Glushko University of Michigan Copyright Office
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Square 1
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Empowerment Clause To “promote the progress of science and the useful arts..” Congress gives authors “the exclusive right to their respective writings and discoveries.”
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Bargain
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Exclusive Rights Section 106
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Rights Granted Reproduction Adaptation Distribution Performance Display
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Fair Use Section 107
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Four Factors Purpose and Character of the Use Nature of the Work Amount Used Effect on the Market
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Particularly Protects Comment and Criticism Non Commercial Uses “Library” Uses Educational Uses
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No protection against... Bad behavior Bad faith
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Slight Detour Bad facts make bad law Good facts can be unstoppable
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Case by case
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Four Factors Purpose and Character of the Use Nature of the Work Amount Used Effect on the Market
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Purpose and Character Commercial vs. Non-commercial Comment or Criticism Education Parody or Satire
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Four Factors Purpose and Character of the Use Nature of the Work Amount Used Effect on the Market
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Nature of the Work Creative vs Functional
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Four Factors Purpose and Character of the Use Nature of the Work Amount Used Effect on the Market
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Amount Used No bright lines Less is more likely to be fair use
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Four Factors Purpose and Character of the Use Nature of the Work Amount Used Effect on the Market
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Important, but not dispositive
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Secret 5 th Factor Are you a bad guy?
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Section 108
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Section 110 TEACH Act Attempts to modernize copyright law Some protection for distance education
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Face to Face Education Lots of leeway to use copyrighted works No replacement for buying books Must use lawfully obtained copies.
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TEACH Act Allows for digital transmission of films “Reasonable and limited...”
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TEACH Act Allows for transmission of still images
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TEACH Act Allows for transmission of or reading of non- dramatic literary works So, no plays...
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TEACH Act Does not apply to materials designed for distance education
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TEACH Act Cannot be used to replace normal book purchases
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Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DCMA) Substantial changes to the Copyright Act Some not really relevant...
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DMCA Cannot break “copy protection” Very limited exceptions
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Anti-Circumvention Region coding? Still unsettled Wildly unpopular
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Easy, right? Copyright is challenging Substantial protections under the law Significant obstacles to normative behavior
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Options? If only there were alternatives...
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Do Academics Own their (c)? Work for hire provision in the © act. Arguably applies to academic work.
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For more... Alissa Centivany, Paper Tigers: Rethinking the Relationship Between Copyright and Scholarly Publishing 17 MICH. TELECOMM. TECH. L. REV (2011)
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Current Publishing System Universities pay faculty to produce content Faculty provides peer review and other services Universities pay publishers for the content their faculty produce
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Creative Commons Alternative to “all rights reserved...” More effectively manage rights
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Push back on publishers Make use of author's addenda Be informed about the publisher's practices Publish in open access journals where possible/practical
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Engage your library Librarians are highly service oriented Seek high service for faculty Encourage them to provide OA
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Thank you! Bobby Glushko University of Michigan Copyright Office
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