Copy Right Fair Use    Creative Commons    Ka Hyeon Lee Liliana Serrano Debra Mascorro
 
Copy Rights Reserve as a part of Intellectual property    The laws of the United States (title 17, U. S. Code) http://www.copyright.gov/circs/circ1.pdf   Based on two basic beliefs: The original creator "deserves to be compensated" for the original work. The original creator should be able to manage usages of the work. (Copyrights 101)    Intellectual property counts as physical property  
Copy Rights  5 exclusive rights for the creators   Reproduce the original work in different format (i.e. copies or phono-records) Produce/prepare new verse based on the original work   Distribute the original work to public by sale, rental, lases, or lending    Perform the work publicly   Display the work publicly
Fair Use   What is "Fair Use"?   The right of the public to use copyright materials. Material used responsibly without the owner's permission. Four things to consider when using copyright work:
     Fair Use      1.The purpose for using it (i.e. non-profit, educational, research). 2.The type of work that is copyrighted (i.e. plays, music, factual). 3.The amount of material being used (i.e. a page, an article, worksheet).  4.The affect of using materials on the publicist’s income.     
Creative Commons Creative Commons is non-profit and a free service   Its purpose is to increase creativity   It is used in addition to a copy right   Everyone from individuals to major companies can and should use Creative Commons   Creative Commons modifies the "all rights reserved" statement that a copyright law infringes. 
Creative Commons Permits the licensor of the copyright to allow users to modify, change or add to the work     Creative Commons is available globally     It is active for as long as the copyright is valid     Simply go to  http://creativecommons.org/choose/  to sign up   Answer a few short questions and submit, its that easy     Over 500 million pieces of work are currently covered uner Creative Commons

Copy Right

  • 1.
    Copy Right FairUse    Creative Commons    Ka Hyeon Lee Liliana Serrano Debra Mascorro
  • 2.
  • 3.
    Copy Rights Reserveas a part of Intellectual property    The laws of the United States (title 17, U. S. Code) http://www.copyright.gov/circs/circ1.pdf   Based on two basic beliefs: The original creator "deserves to be compensated" for the original work. The original creator should be able to manage usages of the work. (Copyrights 101)    Intellectual property counts as physical property  
  • 4.
    Copy Rights 5 exclusive rights for the creators   Reproduce the original work in different format (i.e. copies or phono-records) Produce/prepare new verse based on the original work   Distribute the original work to public by sale, rental, lases, or lending    Perform the work publicly   Display the work publicly
  • 5.
    Fair Use  What is "Fair Use"?   The right of the public to use copyright materials. Material used responsibly without the owner's permission. Four things to consider when using copyright work:
  • 6.
         Fair Use     1.The purpose for using it (i.e. non-profit, educational, research). 2.The type of work that is copyrighted (i.e. plays, music, factual). 3.The amount of material being used (i.e. a page, an article, worksheet). 4.The affect of using materials on the publicist’s income.     
  • 7.
    Creative Commons CreativeCommons is non-profit and a free service   Its purpose is to increase creativity   It is used in addition to a copy right   Everyone from individuals to major companies can and should use Creative Commons   Creative Commons modifies the "all rights reserved" statement that a copyright law infringes. 
  • 8.
    Creative Commons Permitsthe licensor of the copyright to allow users to modify, change or add to the work     Creative Commons is available globally     It is active for as long as the copyright is valid     Simply go to http://creativecommons.org/choose/  to sign up   Answer a few short questions and submit, its that easy     Over 500 million pieces of work are currently covered uner Creative Commons