3. Copyright Act Nonprofit organizations will not digitize orphan works because copyright owners have convinced legislators to lock up their works. Overprotection of the work is just as destructive as under protection
9. Liability Liability for Infringement A court can award up to $150,00 for each separate act of âwillful infringement.â âWillful infringementâ is when you know you were infringing on someoneâs work. Ignorance of the law is no excuse.
10. Do you need permission to use a copyrighted work?
11. If the work is covered by an implied license -- Has the owner of the work used a Creative Commons license to give the public the right to use the work in the way that you would like to use it? If you donât have express or implied rights, do you want to exercise one of the ownerâs exclusive rights? Is your use exempt or excused from liability for infringement?
12. The 4 âFair Useâ factors. What is the character of the use? What is the nature of the work to be used? How much of the work will you use? What effect would this use have on the market for the original or for permissions if the use were widespread.
13. The TEACH Act Became law in 2002. The TEACH Act covers works a teacher would show or play during class. It does not cover materials a teacher wants students to read, study, listen to, or watch on their own time out of the classroom.
15. Resources Harper, Georgia K. Copyright Crash Course University of Texas Merriam-Webster Dictionary retrieved from http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/fair%20use
Hinweis der Redaktion
Orphan works [If the copyright owner is later found then that person can enforce their rights in the Copyright Act. The Copyright Act has so much power that most nonprofits stay away from orphan works.]
Once an idea has been placed on a tangible medium it has automatic copyright protection.Once an idea has been placed on a tangible medium it has automatic copyright protection.
Implied License - when an author posts anything on the Internet they must reasonably expect for their work to be read, downloaded, printed out, forwarded, and even used as the basis for other works.Express License â the copyright owner spells out in detail the rights an author wants readers, viewers, or listeners to have.
Fair use is so hard to understand that it fails to provide effective guidance for the use of othersâ work today.
Copyright does not protect works that lack originality, works in the public domain, freeware, or U.S. govt. works.Any work published before Dec. 31, 1922 is now in public domain. --Works published between Jan. 1, 1923 â Dec. 31, 1978 are protected for 95 years with proper notice. If published between 1923 â 1963 the original term of protections (28 yrs) has expired unless renewed.