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Copyright and Fair Use
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How can you
determine if information on a web page is copyrighted?
There may be a
copyright mark, ©. The creator's name may be given at the
top or bottom of the page. It may be dated, indicating that
it should not be recreated. It does not matter whether a
page is marked with copyright or not. You should assume that
all print, image, and sound materials are published under
intellectual property right protection laws; the creator owns
his/her own creation and holds the copyright automatically from
the time it hits paper or electronic media. (Sorry you
cannot do whatever you want with published digital information,
but this holds for your creations too!)
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How long does copyright last?
In general, a copyright starts the moment
intellectual property is published and ends 70
years after the death of the last author/creator. Copyright
can be renewed by the publisher or estate of the author. When in doubt, a
good "fair use" rule of thumb is to only quote ten
percent of any media exactly and destroy
any project after two years.
Common Misunderstandings
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The web is a free access, use as
you please resource.
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I can do whatever I want with
things I find on the Internet; no one can see me.
The web is free and you can do what you
want with Internet resources...that is until you get caught! It
is illegal to hack into private web sites, plagiarize other's work,
pirate software, spread viruses, or steal research papers. If caught and
convicted, you might be fined thousands of dollars and even thrown in
jail. (To understand the nature of plagiarism see the IMSA Micro Module:
Plagiarism.)
Many people incorrectly believe that only
text can have a copyright. While an idea can't be copyrighted,
original work based on that idea is intellectual property. Photographs,
clip art, web design, graphs, data tables, audio tracks, music, and
movie clips all have implicit copyright proctection...even if they
don't display the © copyright symbol!
- Downloading music is okay.
Everyone does it .
Recording artists make a living by selling
their music. Most consider unpaid downloading of music the ethical
equivalent of shoplifting. The recording industry has begun suing
thousands of individuals for violating copyright laws by file sharing
compact disc music. Guilty parties may pay fines of $750-$150,000 for each
song shared. Even if you did not put the music file on your computer, if
it is there and you own the computer, you pay.
Why would you want to know about
copyright?
Understanding copyright is a professional
obligation. It is important to be able to explain the concept of
intellectual property to both staff and students. Intellectual property
rights are essential to those who work in knowledge fields. Copyright
protects the original work of scientists, educators, philosophers, and
mathematicians.
What information should I include
when using copyrighted materials?
When using materials from the Internet, the
minimum copyright credit should include the copyright symbol, ©; year the
material was first published (1894); and the name of the copyright owner
(Janice P. Cumquat, Ph.D.). This is in addition to any other
citation information you provide for a reference you might use. (For more
on how to create citations, see the IMSA Micro Module: Citation.)
Permission granted from
©Copyright 2002-2005 Illinois Mathematics and Science Academy
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