copyright presentation4

19
Copyright s

Upload: mdelmartinez

Post on 21-May-2015

120 views

Category:

Education


3 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Copyright presentation4

Copyrights

Page 2: Copyright presentation4

How to make use of it

Created by: Maria D. Martinez

Copyright:

Page 3: Copyright presentation4

When did copyright begin?• First copyright statute in the world was created in

1710 by Great Britain.

• Congress continued this statute by enacting the first copyright law in America in 1790.

• To this day, the use of technology (internet) has incorporated changes in the copyright law.

Page 4: Copyright presentation4

What is copyright?

• Copyright by definition according to the Merriam-Webster Dictionary means the exclusive legal right to reproduce, publish, sell, or distribute the matter and form of something.

©

Page 5: Copyright presentation4

So, is this Copyright?

Page 6: Copyright presentation4

Unlock the answer…

Page 7: Copyright presentation4

Kinds of copyrights

Implied license Express license

Explicitly told word by word what type of rights it contains.

It is posted….you can add, delete, copy and replicate.

Page 8: Copyright presentation4

What do copyright laws offer?

• maintains balance

• sets limitations

• allows special exemptions

• protects freedom of speech.

• allows fair use

Page 9: Copyright presentation4

Fair Use …

Page 10: Copyright presentation4

– the right to use copyrighted material without penalties.

Orphan Works = Unknown owner.

If it is for educational use

If work is protected by Creative Common License and given credit

If work is considered “orphan works”

Page 11: Copyright presentation4

Is it fair?

Page 12: Copyright presentation4

When do I know if it is fair use?• Four factors to consider: – 1. What is the intention of the use for the

piece of work?

– 2. What is the origin of the piece of work?

– 3. How much of the work will be used?

– 4. If this kind of use were to widespread, what effect would it have on the owner and on me?

Page 13: Copyright presentation4

Continuation…

• Four answers to consider:– 1. The piece of work is being used for nonprofit,

educational, personal, commentary and even news reporting.

– 2. The origin of the work is a fact piece of material or it has been officially published.

– 3. Only a small amount of the piece of work will be used.

– 4. There is no negative effect if the piece of work goes widespread because the original print is outdated or unavailable, the copyright owner is unidentifiable, or the piece of work has an implied license or it is for educational use.

When do I know if it is fair use?

* When in doubt visit the CCC (Copyright Clearance Center).

Page 14: Copyright presentation4

Copyright laws

Works published:• on or before Dec.

31 1922 • between January

1, 1923 to December 31, 1978 • between 1923 to

Dec of 1963 • after 1978 • before December

of 1978**Attention: As of March 1, 1989, no copyright notice attachment is required.

Page 15: Copyright presentation4

Copyright Act for educators

Section 110(1)• face to face education

Section 110(2)• digital distance

education.

Teach Act

Page 16: Copyright presentation4

Educator’s rules• Students, faculty and staff may:

– Incorporate others’ works into their original creations.

– Display and perform the resulting work in connection with or creation of:• class assignments• curriculum materials• remote instruction• examinations• student portfolios• professional symposia

– Always take into consideration to be limited with the amount of work from others being used, including the use of copies, distributions and research on single chapters, articles, graphs, charts or illustrations.

Page 17: Copyright presentation4

InfringementsInfringement = When you know that you are doing wrong by using a type of work and you still do it anyway.

Page 18: Copyright presentation4

Infringements

• Penalties for infringement can add up to $150,000 for each separate act or infringement.

• Ignorance of the law is no excuse, but the penalty will not be as high as willingly wrongdoing.

• One way to not be found guilty of infringement: the good faith fair use defense.– only applies if person who copied material

reasonably believed that what he/she did was a fair use, which would be the case if you follow the copyright policy

Page 19: Copyright presentation4

Citations

• Georgia K. Harper. (2001, 2007). The Copyright Crash Course. In University of Texas Libraries. Retrieved September 3, 2011, from http://copyright.lib.utexas.edu/.