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Copyright Information
Electronic Reserves and
Media Items on Reserve
Fayetteville
State University’s
Chesnutt Library has
implemented Electronic
Reserves to provide
Reserve Materials
online as support for
the instructional
requirements of specific
courses.
Resources supporting
obtaining copyright
permissions and
understanding fair
use guidelines are
provided below as a
service for Fayetteville State University’s
faculty, staff, and students.
Included below is also
information regarding
performance rights for
copyrighted video recordings.
Description of
Electronic Reserves
Electronic Reserves
involve the creation of a
digital image of the
articles, chapters and
other reserve reading materials.
These digital
files are then linked to the library's
catalog so a student can
search the catalog to
locate and retrieve the
digitized reserve materials,
to print or
download them for their
personal study purposes.
Electronic Reserve
materials may be in the public
domain, subject to fair
use guidelines of the
Copyright Law, or
copyrighted materials
for which permission
from the copyright owner
has been obtained.
Media Items on Reserve
The
copyright owner of a
motion picture or other
audiovisual work has
numerous rights,
including the
public performance of
the work1.
A
public performance2
of a work occurs if any
of the following
conditions are met:
- the
screening is open to
the public
- the
screening is in a
public space where
access is not
restricted
-
persons attending are
outside the normal
circle of a family and
its acquaintances
Examples of public
performances include:
-
showing a
foreign-language film
to the community for
cultural enrichment
-
showing a film to your
club or organization
-
instructor showing a
film in the classroom
for curriculum-related
purposes, but in a
public or
unrestricted-access
location
Examples of non-public
performances include:
-
privately viewing a
film in your room with
friends
- an
instructor showing the
film to officially
registered students in
a classroom, where
content of film
directly relates to
the course
Many
of the video recordings,
DVDs, CDs, and cassettes
in Chesnutt Library's
Media Center do not
include public
performance rights.
Educational use of
motion pictures is
covered by
Section 110(1) of
the Copyright Law, Title
17, U.S. Code, which
allows for "performance
or display of a work by
instructors or pupils in
the course of
face-to-face teaching
activities of a
nonprofit educational
institution, in a
classroom or similar
place devoted to
instruction, unless, in
the case of a motion
picture or other
audiovisual work, the
performance, or the
display of individual
images, is given by
means of a copy that was
not lawfully made under
this title, and that the
person responsible for
the performance knew or
had reason to believe
was not lawfully made."
Fair Use Guidelines
Fair use is
determined on a
case-by-case basis, and
may include short items
such as an article from
a journals, a chapter
from a book or
conference proceedings,
or a poem from a
collected work, or may
include excerpts from
longer items such as
articles, chapters,
poems, and other works
that are of such length
as to constitute a
substantial portion of a
book, journal, or other
work of which they may
be a part. In general,
the total amount of fair
use material included in
electronic reserve
systems for a specific
course should be a small
proportion of the course’s
total assigned reading,
as ad hoc or
supplemental information
beyond a textbook or
other assigned
materials.
Section 107(1-4)
Limitations on Exclusive
Rights: Fair Use, of
the Copyright Law, Title
17, U. S. Code states
"Notwithstanding the
provisions of
sections 106 and
106A, the fair use
of a copyrighted work,
including such use by
reproduction in copies
or phonorecords or by
any other means
specified by that
section, for purposes
such as criticism,
comment, news reporting,
teaching (including
multiple copies for
classroom use),
scholarship, or
research, is not an
infringement of
copyright. In
determining whether the
use made of a work in
any particular case is a
fair use the factors to
be considered shall
include — (1) the
purpose and character of
the use, including
whether such use is of a
commercial nature or is
for nonprofit
educational purposes;
(2) the nature of the
copyrighted work; (3)
the amount and
substantiality of the
portion used in relation
to the copyrighted work
as a whole; and (4) the
effect of the use upon
the potential market for
or value of the
copyrighted work.
The fact that a work is
unpublished shall not
itself bar a finding of
fair use if such finding
is made upon
consideration of all the
above factors."
NOTE:
Legitimately
purchased copies of
video recordings,
DVDs, CDs, and
cassette tapes may
be placed on reserve
in the Media Center.
Home made copies of
television shows,
movies, news, etc. on video recordings,
DVDs, CDs and
cassettes CAN NOT be
placed on Reserve in the
Media Center to be
shown, because it will
violate copyright
compliance regarding
Public Performance
Rights.
The URLs below
describe and define
copyright and fair use,
and provide information
on obtaining copyright
permission:
North Carolina
State University
Scholarly
Communication
Website.
http://www.lib.ncsu.edu/scc/. Provides guidance on
fair use and other
issues such as
database licensing,
user privacy,
materials on
reserve,
interlibrary loan
and document
delivery services
Library of
Congress, U.S.
Copyright Office.
http://lcweb.loc.gov/copyright/. This site provides
basic information on
copyright,
registration
procedures and
forms, Frequently
Asked Questions (FAQS),
pending legislation
information, and
full text of the
Copyright Law of the
United States.
Copyright Law of the
United States of
America and Related
Laws Contained in
Title 17 of the
United States Code,
Circular 92, Chapter
1: Subject Matter
and Scope of
Copyright
http://www.copyright.gov/title17/92chap1.html#101
Association of
American Publishers .
http://www.publishers.org/. This site provides
useful information
on:
How to Request
Copyright Permission
from Publishers
http://www.publishers.org/about/higheredpermission.cfm
Standard
Permission Request
Forms
http://www.publishers.org/about/copyrequest.cfm
Guidelines for
Classroom Copying
http://www.publishers.org/conference/copyguide.cfm
Questions &
Answers on Copyright
for the Campus
Community
http://www.publishers.org/about/copyqa.cfm
Tips for
Requesting
Permission to Use
Copyrighted Literary
Works
http://www.publishers.org/about/rpactips.cfm
"When U.
S. Works
Pass Into the Public
Domain."
http://www.unc.edu/~unclng/public_d.htm . Table/Chart created
by Laura Gasaway,
Director of the Law
Library at UNC -
Chapel Hill. The
chart provides
assistance in
determining time
limits on copyrights
under the Term
Extension Act, PL
105_298.
Copyright
Resources Online ,
http://www.library.yale.edu/~okerson/copyproj.html.
Created by Ann Okerson.
Associate University
Librarian, Yale
University.
Resources are
extensive, and
include annotated
citations,
bibliographies and
sample university
copyright policies.
Copyright Basics,
Copyright Society of
the U.S.A.
http://www.copyrightkids.org/cbasicsframes.htm
Crash Course
in Copyright,
University of Texas.
http://www.utsystem.edu/ogc/intellectualproperty/cprtindx.htm
University
Publishing:
Copyright,
Washington State
University
http://publishing.wsu.edu/copyright/index.html
Copyright Law
and Graduate
Research: New Media,
New Rights, and Your
New Dissertation by
Kenneth Crews
http://www.umi.com/umi/dissertations/copyright/
Copyright for
Music Librarians,
Music Library
Association
http://www.lib.jmu.edu/org/mla/Guidelines/
Performance
Rights for Media and
Multi-Media Rooms,
Tampa Library, University of South
Florida
http://www.lib.usf.edu/tampa/mr/publicperf.html
Library Media and
Public Performance
Rights,
Kuhn Library, University of
Maryland
http://aok2.lib.umbc.edu/media/PublicPerformanceRights.php

Faculty needing
additional assistance in
obtaining copyright
clearance for Electronic
Reserves and classroom
materials may contact
Gloria Garner, Head of
Circulation, at
910-672-1236 or by email
at
ggarner@uncfsu.edu. For
questions regarding
items placed on Reserve
in the Media Center,
contact Carlos Lazaro,
Head of the Media Center
at 672-1671 or by email
at
clazaro@uncfsu.edu.
Return to Chesnutt
Library's Home Page
Return to Fayetteville
State University's Home
Page
Charles W. Chesnutt
Library, Fayetteville
State University,
Fayetteville, N.C. 28301
Page Maintained By: Jan
S. Whitfield
jwhitfield@uncfsu.edu
Last Updated: 12/8/06
Visits since August 1, 2002 |