4. “ To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries;” U.S. Constitution - Article 1 Section 8
13. This sure looks like a copy to me… The artist could have saved himself trouble and legal fees by getting permission to use the original photo for a derivative work. - Diana Transformative derivative works are not “theft.” Criminalizing the use of art to create new and substantially different art is not beneficial to artists; just the opposite, in fact.” - Adam
Why are we here: goal is to get you to start asking more questions about how you and your students use copyrighted materials in the classroom.
Whole Room Discussion: What is it? What purpose does it serve? Why should we care? How does it come into play in your classrooms?
Sky is the limit, close the door, hyper-comply Put yourself in a category…show of hands
What does this mean? Founders believed that encouraging the development of new ideas and information benefits society. The core purpose is to PROMOTE creativity and the spread of knowledge.
Protects books, movies, music paintings, photographs, websites, images, videogames, performances, architecture, software Owners have the exclusive right to do and to authorize others to: Reproduce work Distribute work Perform or display work publically Create derivative works
Does Fair Use mean anything to you? When does it apply?
Going through this decision making process is all about CRITICAL THINKING. The copyright guidelines that you see many versions of (30 seconds of music or video, etc) limit decision making because they appear to TELL US what we can and cannot do.
Option to license through CC Demo search through CC and explain how to find copyright info and attribution info