Copyright in Cyberspace Copyright Law Larry Lessig David Post Eugene Volokh

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Let’s Talk about Intellectual Property
Advertisements

“Fair Use” – Copyright in Cyberspace Adapted by Jack Davis from “Cyberspace Law for Non-Lawyers” Larry Lessig, David Post, Eugene Volokh ©1999 – Social.
Plagiarism, Copyright and Fair Use
By: Brad Templeton Presented by: Kelly Canales “10 Big Myths about Copyright Explained?”
COPYRIGHT GUIDELINES. WHAT IS PROTECTED BY COPYRIGHT? Original works of authorship Original works of authorship Books Books Magazine & newspaper articles.
Copyright Myths. "If it doesn't have a copyright notice, it's not copyrighted." This was true in the past, but today almost all major nations follow the.
Office of the Chief Information Officer 1 Notes on Copyright and Fair Use Bob Kalal Director, Information Technology Policy and Services Office of the.
COPYRIGHT AND FAIR USE WITH DIGITAL PHOTOS By: Melissa Snell ITEC 7445.
Copyright Laws.
Copyright Law and Avoiding Plagiarism
An Introduction to Copyright Central Michigan University Libraries January, 2013.
Copyright, Designs and Patents Act. Introduction You have spent three months working on your coursework. It is absolutely brilliant,, you just know that.
Copyright & Fair Use. What is copyright? The legal right granted to an author, composer, playwright, publisher, or distributor to exclusive publication,
Copyright Basics. What is Copyright? Copyright allows authors, musicians, artists, etc. to make money off of their labor. Copyright allows authors, musicians,
“Pinpoint” the Source Being Mindful of Copyright Etiquette By Brenda Bishop.
Standards and Guidelines for Web Page Publishing December 9, 2009.
How Well Do You Know Copyright? Connie Murphy Hylton High School Library 2008.
Examples of problems with teacher/school site violations: A company’s logo and link on footer of homepage when company is not their business partner—only.
Canadian Copyright Act Became law in January 1924 and was amended in 1988 (Phase I) The second phase amendments were completed in 1997 when Bill C-32.
Copyright and Fair Use for Faculty Fair Use. What is Fair Use? – A legal term, codified in Section 107 of U.S. Copyright Law – Allows free use of copyrighted.
© 2001 Steven J. McDonald What do these have in common? The Mona Lisa The Starr report What I am saying Your idea for a web page The Guggenheim Musuem.
Vonda S. Beavers, Ed.D. Fall Take the quiz…. Jo Cool or Jo Fool?
Copyright 101 Understanding the Basics 1. Myths You can use anything you can download from the Internet If a work does not contain the copyright symbol.
7/3/08 Created by Mae Thomas Property Rights There can be consequences if you violate others' intellectual property rights. (That is, if you copy something.
 Copyright protects creative expression that has been reduced to a tangible form, such as a book, piece of recorded music, computer program, screenplay,
Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988
Unit 12 Additional Evidence Chantelle. 1.1 I can describe what types of information are needed. Business card In my business card I included my logo I.
COPYRIGHT AND FAIR USE POLICIES By Amanda Newell.
Principles and Rules of Copyright Copyright is protection for intellectual property.
Copyright Ignorance of the law is no excuse. Respecting the law If you copy a work protected by copyright and give or sell it to others, you are breaking.
Applying Copyright in Scholarship and Instruction Gail McMillan Digital Library and Archives University Libraries, Virginia Tech
Intellectual Property Rights and the Web: Common Myths Presentation by Jean Mistele.
26-Oct-2005cse ip © 2005 University of Washington1 Intellectual Property INFO/CSE 100, Autumn 2005 Fluency in Information Technology
Broadcasting News Trivia "LESSON PLANS." BBC News. BBC, 30 Jan Web. 19 Nov
10/6/2015 What is Copyright? Top Ten Myths Robert McAndrews Humble ISD Career & Technology Education Center.
Digital Citizenship 6 th – 8 th Unit 1 Lesson 5 A Creator’s Rights What rights do you have as a creator?
COPYRIGHT IS A FORM OF PROTECTION GROUNDED IN THE U.S. CONSTITUTION AND GRANTED BY LAW FOR ORIGINAL WORKS OF AUTHORSHIP FIXED IN A TANGIBLE MEDIUM OF EXPRESSION.
Copyrights and Wrongs Day 03. Essential Question How can I make responsible choices when I use other people’s creative work (pictures, etc)?
“10 Big Myths about copyright” Presented By: Brenton Barnes Summer 06.
Digital Citizenship Project By Lacy Brown. Netiquette Netiquette is etiquette for the internet. Netiquette is etiquette for the internet. You should be.
What is a Copyright? A property right attached to an original work or art or literature – not ideas or facts Grants creator exclusive rights to reproduce,
PLAGIARISM adapted from ANGEL Cyberplagiarism Question Bank.
Yours, Mine and Ours: Copyright in Cyberspace 2005 National LTAP Conference July 26, 2005 Nita Lovejoy Iowa State University.
ACCT-IGD-3. Students will examine the professional and ethical issues involved in the graphics and design industry. By: Michael Simmons.
Copyright and Fair Use by Frank Sholedice Extension/Experiment Station Publications Assistant Editor University Communications and Marketing Services New.
Intellectual Property Basics
By: Brad Templeton Presenter: Michael Brown Eng 393 Section 0301.
Copyright Laws for Education Susan Rheinwald Fernando Prieto.
A copyright is basically the legal exclusive right of the author of a creative work to control the copying of that work. COPYRIGHT LAWS.
11 Copyright Myths By: Michael Armstrong. What is a copyright? A copyright is the exclusive right to make copies, license, and otherwise exploit a literary,
Laws Jamie Dunn.
Copyright Laws Dodge City Public Schools November 2013 Compiled By: 6-12 Academic Coaches and DCHS Librarian Approved By: 6-12 Administrators.
Intellectual Property And Fair Use
Bell Ringer Take everything off your desk. You won’t need a pencil in today’s class until after the trial. Please spend the time before the bell rings.
“ 10 Big Myths about Copyright Explained” By: Brad Templeton Presented By: Nichole Au December 6, 2007.
FAIR USE -What is it? -Comments on Fair Use -Four-factor Balancing Test -Common Misunderstandings.
Copyright and Fair Use What Teachers Should Know April Shinpaugh By PresenterMedia.comPresenterMedia.com.
Everything You Need to Know about Copyright By: Cathryna Brown.
COPYRIGHT LAW AND FAIR USE OF IMAGES FOR BLOGGERS Images Julie Umbarger.
Let’s Talk about Intellectual Property Copyright Plagiarism Fair Use.
10 Big Myths About Copyright Explained Article by: Brad Templeton Presentation: James Brown.
Plagiarism Miss H. 2008/2009. The entire content of this presentation comes from TurnItIn.com Turnitin allows free distribution and non-profit use of.
INTERNET SAFETY, NETIQUETTE, AND COPYRIGHT LAWS By Alex Pagliaro.
10 Big Myths about Copyright Explained Article by: Brad Templeton Presentation by: Oluwatoyin Adebona English 393 Section 501.
1 Copyright Laws. 2 Terms Copyright Fair Use Derivative Parody Trademark Sampling Infringement Public Domain.
What is copyright law?.
Copyright Basics for Educators Charles Crowley - EDTC Fall Evans
Evaluate It - Lesson 3.
Plagiarism/Fair Use/Copyright
Copyright & Fair Use.
Presentation transcript:

Copyright in Cyberspace Copyright Law Larry Lessig David Post Eugene Volokh

Copyright in Cyberspace Copyright In Cyberspace Consider the following situations: –You buy a piece of software and it to five friends. –You download an article from a newspaper's Web page and post in on an electronic bulletin board. –You take a post from one news group and forward it to another news group. –You respond to someone's discussion list post, and quote part of his post in yours Each of these examples implicates copyright law. In each of them there's at least a possibility that you'd be violating the law (though we'll find that in at least some of them you're probably safe).

Copyright in Cyberspace Copyright Law usually gives a copyright owner the exclusive right to control copying of a writing (or recording or picture or electronic transcription).

Copyright in Cyberspace Pretty much all writings are copyrighted How to obtain a copyright –You don´t need to send it in to the Library of Congress. –You don´t need to put a copyright notice on it. –Your work is copyrighted THE MOMENT IT´S WRITTEN DOWN. you need to do *absolutely nothing* except for writing it down. Two limitations –Extremely short writings –If you simply copy what someone else has done, without adding anything new of your own

Copyright in Cyberspace Electronic copying Things that are written down electronically are just as protected by copyright as things that come out on paper. –If you download an article from a newspaper Web site and forward it to a news group, you've made copies. –If someone saves your in an archive, he's made copies. –If you quote someone's newsgroup post in your response to the post, you've made copies. All of above might be infringements

Copyright in Cyberspace In some of these situations, the copies might be legal, –because they are EXPLICITLY ALLOWED by the copyright owner (you might have seem some online documents which specifically allow readers to copy them), or –because they are FAIR USES or, –because they are allowed by IMPLIED LICENSES. If you made copies and above three situations did not hold, you violate the copyright law.

Copyright in Cyberspace It’s okay to copy facts and ideas There are some things that aren't "copying" for copyright purposes: Copying the FACTS from someone else's work isn't considered copying. If a physicist discovers a law of nature, or a historian uncovers some facts about the past, everyone will be free to copy this information. And this is true even if they've invested years of effort into their discoveries - facts are in the public domain. But copying the *words* someone uses to express the facts, and often the *selection* and *arrangement*;of the facts, still isn't allowed. Copying an IDEA from someone else's work isn't considered copying for copyright purposes (though in some situations it might violate rights under the *patent* laws). Thus, even if I'm the first person to think about writing a courtroom drama set in a virtual cybercourt, everyone is free to copy this idea.

Copyright in Cyberspace Implied License Example You post something to a discussion list. I quote your message in my response. Have I acted illegally? Probably not, though your message is copyrighted, and I copied it. Your posting the message to a discussion list almost certainly gives others an "implied license" to quote it. When a copyright owner acts in such a way that *reasonable people would assume that he's allowing them to make copies*, the law interprets his conduct as creating an "implied license.“ Implied licenses can always be EXPRESSLY REVOKED, just by saying so in a way that potential copiers will see.

Copyright in Cyberspace Fair Uses The fair use doctrine asks several questions: –Is your use noncommercial? –Is your use for purposes of criticism, comment, parody, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, or research? –Is the original work mostly fact (as opposed to mostly fiction or opinion)? –Has the original work been published (as opposed to sent out only to one or a few people)? –Are you copying only a small part of the original work? –Are you copying only a relatively insignificant part of the original work (as opposed to the most important part)? –Are you adding a lot new to the work (as opposed to just quoting parts of the original)? –Does your conduct leave unaffected any profits that the copyright owner can make (as opposed to displacing some potential sales OR potential licenses of reprint rights)?

Copyright in Cyberspace The more YES answers there are to the above questions, the more likely it is that your use is legal. The more NO answers there are, the more likely it is that your use is illegal. Sometimes even a few YESes will lead to a finding of fair use; sometimes even a few NOes will lead to a finding of no fair use. Often even the sharpest lawyers won't be able to predict the result.

Copyright in Cyberspace Some Fair Use Examples You get a personal message and you pass it along to one other person. PROBABLY UNFAIR, though you might still have an implied license. (For instance, if the message asks for help on a nonprivate matter, there might be an implied license to pass it along to others who might be able to help.) You download an article from a newspaper's Web site and post it to a news group. The site carries advertising, and says "Do not send any copies of these articles to other people" (thus negating any implied license). PROBABLY UNFAIR, since if this becomes commonplace, fewer people would access the Web site and see the advertising. You forward someone's message from one publicly accessible news group to another news group. PROBABLY FAIR, because the message was published, and because the person posting it has no commercial interest in selling the message. You quote a few sentences from a news article that you downloaded. PROBABLY FAIR, because it's only a few sentences.