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This presentation contains copyrighted materials used under the Fair Use Guidelines of the United States Copyright Law. Further use is prohibited.
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© Mary Ellen Alagna, 2010.
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What is Copyright? Copyright is the law that allows authors, musicians, bands, actors, directors, artists, graphic designers, etc. to make money from their work and effort Copyright prevents others from taking – stealing – others work for free. It also prevents others from changing or altering a work without permission.
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Why do we need copyright? Musicians, bands, and other artistic people create works to make money. If they can’t make a living, most will stop creating. If a record company can’t make money from bands, they will cut them. If copyright exists but isn’t enforced, musicians will still get their contracts cut. The result? Less music, art, books, etc.
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Copyright Law: Copyright owner has exclusive use to Copy Reproduce Distribute or sell Perform Display Adapt or prepare new works based on the original
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What Does Copyright Protect? Literary works: books, stories Musical works: songs, music, performances Dramatic works: Plays, stage performances Choreography: dance, cheers Architectural works Software Sound recordings Web designs/Graphic art Video games TV, movies Videos Pantomimes Photographs Internet items Maps, charts
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What is NOT protected? Facts Ideas Words Names Slogans – but they can be trademarked Blank forms Government works Lists Copyright expired items – since 1923
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Myth 1: If it’s copy- righted, I can’t use it. Yes, you can use it. You have to either get permission to use it or Follow the Fair Use Guidelines to use it.
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Myth 2: “They” will never know. Unfortunately, “They” do find out. Big brother really is watching, even in the middle of Texas.
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Disney and Warner Brothers both pay “bounties” for copyright violators. Their employees MUST turn in violators.
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Myth 3: There is no © symbol, so it’s not copyrighted. Since the USA passed the Copyright Act of 1976 the copyright symbol is no longer needed. All intellectual works that anyone creates is copyrighted when it is fixed – saved to a disk, written on paper - without notice or registration, unless specifically surrendered to someone else.
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Myth 4: It’s just about money “They” don’t need. Copyright isn’t about money. It’s really about the common good. A democratic society needs to advance the knowledge base and educate its citizens. Copyright encourages the intellectual efforts that further the public good.
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Copyright has deep roots in Judeo-Christian world. The practice of private ownership dates to Ancient Rome. The first recorded copyright case occurred in Ireland in 567. A monk visited his abbot in a neighboring monastery, liked his Psalter prayer, and secretly made a copy of it. The abbot found out and demanded it’s return, the monk refused, and they went to the King.
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The King ruled that a copy is property and stated the copy must be returned. This established an author’s right to control copies of his manuscript until the first sale.
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Technology drives copyright Copyright wasn’t an issue until Johann Guttenberg invented the first printing press in 1436.
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Early copyright laws Milton and Locke advocated copyright laws in the 1600’s. The first copyright law was passed in England in 1710. Our founding fathers included a copyright clause in our constitution.
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First U.S. Law The first national copyright law was passed by Congress in 1790 and signed by Washington. It protected books, maps, and charts for 14 years with a 14 year renewal. Amendments added items and years.
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Current Law The Digital Millennium Copyright Act of 1998 governs usage today. In 1885 an international conference resulted in the Berne Convention which established international copyright law and was signed by almost all of the world’s major nations. The USA finally signed in 1989 due to the 1976 law and the copyright notice.
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Technology has fueled the need for changes. Copy machines led to Fair Use Guidelines. The first ones were the Fair Use Guidelines for Educational Fair Use in 1976. They established standards for classroom copying.
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As technology has developed, the Fair Use Guidelines have been expanded to include ones for music (1976), videotapes (1979), and multimedia (1996).
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Myth 5: I copied it from the Internet, so it is OK to use Items on the Internet are copyright protected. Assume EVERYTHING is copyrighted Items can be used IF –Credit the source of info –Use according to guidelines –Ask for permission
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Fair Use Guidelines Guidelines for education Exceptions to the copyright Law Not a law but are a defense Limited use without obtaining permission Must follow ALL four factors
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Four Factors The purpose and character of use is nonprofit and educational The nature of the copyrighted work – what is being copied? Prefer facts or nonfiction The amount or portion used The effect of the use on the POTENTIAL market
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Two Tests of Fair Use: Brevity and Spontaneity Use is at the instance and inspiration of the individual The inspiration and decision to use the work is so close to the time of use that it is unreasonable to expect the user to obtain permission
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Student Limitations Students may use items for a multimedia project for a specific course Students may perform/display their creations for that specific course Students may keep their works indefinitely for their portfolio for college or job interviews Teachers may not use their work at conferences without permission
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Credit Sources With or without permission you still have to CREDIT SOURCE First, copyright notice on opening screen Second, credit on the slide itself with the © notice and info Third, credit in the bibliography or works cited Using is different from crediting
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Portion Limits: TEXT Up to 10% or 1000 words – lesser amount
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Portion: Motion Media/Video 10% or 3 minutes – lesser amount can be included in YOUR project
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Portion Limits: Poems Entire poem – 250 words max Only 3 poems by one poet OR only 5 poems from ONE anthology - book Long poems up to 250 words Only 3 EXCERPTS by 1 poet OR 5 excerpts from one source
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Portion Limits: Music Melody, lyrics, video Up to 10% Only 30 seconds from a single work Alterations cannot change the basic melody or fundamental character – don’t adapt, play slower
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MP3 Files Piracy in music and videos Crackdown by industries Distribute in copy protected format
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Portion Limits: Pictures Photos, illustrations, art OK to use an entire photo, graphic, illustration Only 5 images by one artist or photographer Only 10% or 15 images from a single collection or book
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Numerical Data Up to 10% Up to 2500 fields, cells, entries from a data table or database
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How Long Does Copyright Last Life of the creator plus 70 years for works created after 1978 Works published between 1978 and 1923 are protected for 95 years Everything published before 1923 is in the Public Domain
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What is the Public Domain? No one owns it Use anything in any way you choose All US government works Authors/creators can choose to put their work in the public domain by including a notice with it
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What to Do? Check copyright sources Books in the library Web sites Ask for permission Form letter is on the share drive Include the copyright notice and credit sources
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Breaking the Law Copying and Pasting Using a portion that is more than allowed Not crediting your sources Public Performance Stealing html code Copying graphics
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http://www.stfrancis.edu/cid/copyrightbay /fairuse.htm http://www.stfrancis.edu/cid/copyrightbay /fairuse.htm
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Works Cited Templeton, Brad. 10 Big Myths about Copyright Explained. Oct 2004. 13 Sept 2007. http://www.templetons.com/brad/cop ymyths.html UT Austin. Fair Use of Copyrighted Materials. March 2005. 13 Sept 2007. http://www.utsystem.edu/OGC/Intelle ctualProperty/copypol2.htm
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