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Re: Fair use



Mr. Thatcher made some good points regarding the possible limiting effect of state contract law on the ability to use copyrighted material under a "fair use" defense found in the federal copyright law.

Another point to be made, however, is that use of "copyrighted" articles by instructors under the defense of "fair use" is specifically limited by provisions of the U. S. Copyright Act. As with any other right, there is no absolute defense allowed by the referring to "fair use." The courts evaluate many factors to determine is the use is actually "fair." I won't go into those here as I assume most of the discussion members are aware of these.

But, as pointed out in U. S. Copyright Circular 21 ("http://www.copyright.gov/circs/circ21.pdf";), "Reproductions of Copyrighted Works by Educators and Librarians", educators are limited in how many copies they can make for distribution in a classroom of an copyrighted article, how much of the article's total content they can copy, how many times the teacher can copy copyrighted material within a school year.

Thus, copying and/or displaying a copyrighted article (even if authored by self) and then claiming it's for educational purpose and, hence, can be unlimitedly used/displayed because the use meets a fair use defense is not accepted by the courts if they follow the guidelines of the Copyright Office.

Linda Hopkins

Linda K. Hopkins
Attorney at Law, Intelliware Int'l Law Firm
449 South Owasso Boulevard West, Roseville, MN 55113
lin.hopkins@hotmail.com