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Re: Fair use
- To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Subject: Re: Fair use
- From: Ann Okerson <ann.okerson@yale.edu>
- Date: Thu, 7 Jun 2007 17:06:48 EDT
- Reply-to: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Sender: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
[Of possible interest -- from a one-on-one exchange with Sandy Thatcher. Ann Okerson]
Sandy -- as as I wrote in my liblicense-l posting, I think you may be conflating several different things in your messages about "fair use."
1. The transfer of copyright ownership of an article by an author to someone else loses for the author those ownership rights (in the US, these are defined by copyright law at the very beginning of the Act -- "distribution" is one of them). That owner still has the other rights granted under copyright law, BUT no longer those of owner -- rather, of a user, like the rest of us.
For those in the US, these user rights certainly include fair use; fair dealing in the UK (other countries have their own limitations and exceptions); AND whatever other rights the copyright laws of nations permit to their people - as users of copyrighted information.
2. The difficulty arises over (see my earlier posting) the definition of fair use. Sure, the US author (no longer copyright owner in our scenario) has fair use rights to the article s/he's transferred over to the publisher or whomever; so do I as a user; that's not the question. I've understood the question you pose to be: does fair use give the non-owner the right to redistribute the article? And the law says, no, the distribution right right was foregone in the transfer.
But this doesn't altogether help us, for in real life, what we are discussing is this: what is fair use in an *electronic* environment? Does it include the right to post or to send an entire article? When and under what conditions? In the US, we have the four use factors to guide us about what we can or can't do -- and they help but don't give us any "bright line" rules! AAA may say that one can ALWAYS do this as s/he pleases (and would be incorrect); BBB (I) might say "IT DEPENDS" on an analysis of fair use or whatever other factors apply; you (Sandy) might say, NEVER for the author, but IT DEPENDS for all others.
3. Our author (now a user!) has two more considerations, apart from fair use:
A. The author-publisher transfer: does it permit for the author certain actions, such as posting on preprint servers or personal home pages (so everyone can look and download); forwarding the article as a surrogate for offprints, etc? For what versions of the work? How should one identify this work and credit it? A number of agreements do permit some or all of these types of activities and are clear about what/when/how: (see for example the very fine agreement of the American Physical Society), and if so, the "can I?" answer to the author is clear.
B. Also to be taken into account are the "norms" of a given discipline or group. Is the proposed action something that is normally now done within a discipline or among institutions or as normal practice? How? If so, then the author might rest somewhat easier, though "norms" are not the same as legal ground.
4. If none of the above is helpful, the author who wants to forward his articles could (1) get in touch with the publisher and conduct a useful dialog; and/or (2) decide to assume the "risk" (to the extent that there is one, i.e., that the publisher could litigate against the author, which doesn't seem too likely).
I believe that questions of this sort provide a great opportunity for the two parties to engage in a mutually educational conversation. (1) would certainly be the recommended course and appropriate course of action!!
BTW, nothing stops said author from forwarding citations or links, so far as I know.
Ann Okerson/Yale Library
On Wed, 6 Jun 2007, Sandy Thatcher wrote:
My contention is not that the author has NO rights, but only the rights agreed upon in the contract. If you think it's ridiculous that the author has no residual fair use rights, then think how ridiculous it is that authors have wildly differing notions of what is fair use-as do judges and lawyers, by the way-so that contracts would be vitiated if authors had freedom to do anything they felt to be fair use after turning over all rights to a publisher.... [SNIP]
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