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[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index][tlug] Copyright and TLUG (was: Perhaps of intereste to Sci Fi Fans)
- Date: Thu, 06 Sep 2007 17:04:04 +0900
- From: "Stephen J. Turnbull" <stephen@example.com>
- Subject: [tlug] Copyright and TLUG (was: Perhaps of intereste to Sci Fi Fans)
- References: <d8fcc0800709011615r7c015ec7le1cd3339bf089a8e@mail.gmail.com>
Josh Glover writes: > On 01/09/07, Shawn <javajunkie@example.com> wrote: > > > I was curious on fair use and looked into that at > > http://www.copyright.gov/title17/92chap1.html#107 > > That section would seem to indicate that I can copy the entirety of a > copyrighted work and redistribute it on this list, since it is for the > purpose of criticism, comment, or news reporting, depending on how you > look at it. But that does not seem quite right in terms of how > copyright law is applied in the US. No. First, "fair use" is AFAIK a U.S.-only concept, it doesn't even exist in other common-law jurisdictions such as England IIRC. Japan definitely doesn't have it, rather there are explicit (and very restricted) exceptions in the law. Second, remember that copyright applies to the expression, not the content, of an "original work of authorship". If you are going to do criticism of the style of a haiku, it's hard to see how you can avoid reproducing the whole thing. However, if you are going to criticize _Ulysses_, you can probably prove your point with less than 0.01% of the text. Any further reproduction of it is a violation. If your interest is in criticizing the plot (assuming _Ulysses_ even has a plot, of course), then you may not be able to quote it at all, but will have to resort to a paraphrase. It is a "rule of reason" issue, that is, it's up to the judge, as a prototypical "reasonable person", to decide. There are guidelines and as always you can appeal to a higher court, but basically the law admits that this is pretty subjective. Again, only if the exact wording is newsworthy (eg, a fraudulent legal contract) would "news reporting" justify reproduction of a copyrighted work. Note that a .mil site probably needs to have explicit copyright notice, as the U.S. government is not allowed to claim copyright in works it produces (this is intended to prevent the absurd kind of thing that the MOF does, copyrighting the Japanese legal code and charging everybody an arm and a leg to get a copy; at least they don't have the emperor declare laws top secret any more!) The government can *acquire* copyright, however, and these days for things like software it is often the case that the government licenses use of software and such from a contractor ... so the fact that it's a .mil or .gov site doesn't mean you can copy freely. You probably can't get socked with criminal (ie, intentional) violation unless there's a notice, though. > Here at TLUG, I think we will want to err on the side of caution when > it comes to copyrighted material. *All* original works of authorship are copyrighted according to the Berne Convention and WIPO. If it's worth copying and it wasn't written by an employee of the U.S. government, you had better have pretty good proof that it's out of copyright (either the term expired, or there was an explicit dedication to the public domain, preferably registered with the copyright office)---or a license, which is what free software is all about.
- References:
- [tlug] Copyright and TLUG (was: Perhaps of intereste to Sci Fi Fans)
- From: Josh Glover
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