5. (Harper, 2007)
Does the work have a
licenses or do you have a
written contract to use the
material?
6. Express License
âą Spells out details of what the author is
releasing
âą Can be done by attaching a
License to your posting or
website
âą Lets it be known that you want your work
to be the flow of creativity
(Harper, 2007)
9. Teach Act cont.
âą Section 110(2) of the Copyright Act
â Revised and expanded
âą Materials need to be pared down
â Reasonable and limited portions
âą Audiovisual and musical shown as clips only
âą Applies to accredited nonprofit
educational institutions
âą Not extended to works produced or
marketed for in-class use
(Harper, 2007)
11. Orphan Works
âą Copyrighted material whose owner can not
be found
âą Books, music, record, films, etc
â Work not registered
â Sold rights, but did not register transfer
â Ownerâs death, heirs not found
âą Can be risky if owner emerges
(Public Knowledge, 2011)
12. Public Knowledge
â Thinks orphan works should be available
â Created policy proposals to facilitate use of
orphan works
(Public Knowledge, 2011)
13. References
Harper, G. (2001, 2007). Copyright crash course.
University of Texas Libraries.
Retrieved from
http://copyright.lib.utexas.edu/index.html
Public Knowledge (2011). Key Issues: Orphan Works.
Retrieved from
http://publicknowledge.org/issues/ow
Siloprod. (2008, April, 22). Day at School: Copyright and
You. Retrieved on June 13, 2013 from
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yg7MXoaUUvo.
14. Photos
Dunn, M. (2007, April, 5). [photograph]. Retrieved on June 12, 2013 from
http://www.flickr.com/photos/mikedefiant/447700120/
Frankrizzo805. (2011, February, 11). [phototraph]. Retrieved on June 12, 2013 from
http://www.flickr.com/photos/85062840@N02/8140021287/
George Eastman House. (2009, March, 6). [photograph]. Retrieved on June 12, 2013 from
http://www.flickr.com/photos/george_eastman_house/3333259091/
IDIS 110 â Group 1. (2012, October, 6). [photograph]. Retrieved on June 12 2013 from
http://www.flickr.com/photos/35126357@N06/5058111168/
Raftery, T. (2011, February, 3). [photograph]. Retrieved on June 12 2013 from
http://www.flickr.com/photos/traftery/5412686505/
Romero, N. (2008, July, 21). [photograph]. Retrieved on June 12, 2013 from
http://www.flickr.com/photos/naiffer/2691471212/
Thalerock. (2008, February, 1). [photograph]. Retrieved on June 12 2013.from
http://www.flickr.com/photos/thalesrock/2234124960/
Wikimedia Commons. (2006, December, 17). [photograph]. Retrieved on June 12, 2013 from
http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Yamashita_Yohei_-_CC_on_Orange_(by).jpg
Hinweis der Redaktion
Same copyright laws as books, music, or videoRealities of electronic communicationSome think law needs to changeIt takes time to change law, which might be good to give time to learn about how new technologies will be used through experience.
Many think Internet is public domainAll postings are protectedCopyrights of public works are not always displayedImplied and Express licenses helpLaw protects them same as printed worksPossibly because law covers display of copyright notice.
Implied LicensesIt is expected that posting on the internet will be read, downloaded, printed, or forwarded. Just by posting a limited license is granted by authorMany things to considerNot automatic for commercial use Not part of implied license Boundaries are vague
Allows copy for nonprofit purposesOr create works based on it
Educational, research, and scholarly fair use is changingQuestionable, so rely on implied and express licensesWebsite for materials intended for educators and students
Section 110(1) of the Copyright ActSeparate set of rights for educatorsin addition to fair useTo display or perform otherâs works in the classroomi.e. face-to-faceApplies to any workDifferent for distance education
The librarian is your first line of defense.First use the Librarian Check Copyright Clearance CenterIf work is part of a book or journalMoviesInternet ArchiveNews ArchivesCheck web