2. The education technological revolution The 70’s The photocopier Moorehouse v UNSW 1974 Part VB license for education purposes (1980)
3. The education technological revolution The 80’s The video recorder The ‘Betamax’ case 1984 Part VA license off air broadcast (1989)
4. The education technological revolution The90’s The Internet & World Wide Web A&M Records v Napster 2001 Copyright Amendment (Digital Agenda) Act 2000
5. Early 21st Century developments 2001 Web 2.0, P2P, Facebook, Twitter Wireless, Bluetooth, iPhone, Kindle Future technological developments? 2005
6. The 2010’s Australian internet use 80% 18-25 year olds 96% University Students 100% YouTube 2nd largest search engine in the world 70% of 18-34 years olds watched TV online. By 2010 Gen Y will outnumber baby bombers
7. Can I post photos for my students? So what? Take Down Notices? Can I link to YouTube? But I’m using it in class? Copyright Infringement? Infringement Notifications? Who Owns What?
8. Legal Use of Electronic Material You may copy 10% of the words of an electronic work The whole of an artistic work (i.e. photographs) But ONLY for use in class or on a password protected intranet! (smartcopying.com.au)
9. Legal risks Many misconceptions about Copyright law and the spectrum of the ‘Education Licence’ Copyright material incorporated into media is not covered under the education licence. Material is licensed for classroom or the library but not podcasts and YouTube.
10. Copyright myths Internet is Public Domain, can use anything. Using material for teaching is Fair Dealing. If you’re not charging for it, it’s alright. We’re using the material for the public good. They won’t sue a school. I won’t be personally liable.
11. Copyright Facts Copying small portion may still be a copyright infringement. ‘Quality’ of the work taken, not just ‘Quantity’. ‘Works’ on the internet are copyright by their owner. Material licensed for education use in classes may not be licensed for the Internet (YouTube and iTunesU).
13. Solutions Check the copyright restrictions on ANY resource you wish to copy/modify and publish to a public site Ask for permission from the copyright holder to reproduce their work on your site Use CREATIVE COMMONS licenced material
14. Licence Share/ remix/ spread… and attribute. licence elements: Attribution – attribute the author Noncommercial – no commercial use ShareAlike – changes allowed, but only if you put the new work under the same licence
15. Original Slideshow ‘Web 2.0 and Copyright Legal Issues for Universities’ by Aaron Magner, available at http://www.slideshare.net/AaronMagner/web-20-and-copyright-legal-issues-for-universities Images from Istockphoto.com and flickr.com Attribution