Wright State University
Policy number: 2303
Subject: Copyrighted Materials
Date issued: Revised/March 2006
Authority: Copyright Revision Act of 1976 and 1980 Amendments relating to
the reproduction of materials; Public Law 94-553; Title 17, United States Code,
Section 101, et. seq.
2303.1 General Policy
- Wright State University is committed to compliance with the United States
Copyright Revision Act of 1976, as amended, relating to the reproduction
and use of copyrighted materials.
- Although Wright State University encourages its faculty and staff to engage
in a wide variety of activities related to education, it respects the legal
right to intellectual and creative property in all media. Such educational
activities must therefore be performed within the bounds of copyright law.
The university intends to adhere to the provisions of the U.S.
Copyright Law (Title
17, United States Code, Section 101, et. seq.) and expects faculty and
staff to adhere to these provisions as well.
- Wright State University does not support unauthorized duplication or
use of protected works in any form. Employees who willfully disregard the
copyright policy are in violation of university policy, do so at their
own risk, and assume all liability. Although the university wishes to be
supportive of faculty who adhere to the copyright policy, the Office of
Attorney General of the state of Ohio is empowered solely to make any and
all decisions concerning support of employees who may be sued for violation
of copyright law.
- Where procedures are not clearly defined, or if guidance regarding questions
of copyright ownership or infringement is needed, employees of Wright State
University should contact the Office of General Counsel (937-775-2475).
- This policy is concerned solely with the use of copyrighted materials
owned by third parties. It is not intended to address the ownership of
copyrightable materials created by University employees. For information
about the ownership of copyrighted works and other intellectual property,
see the Wright State University Policy and Procedures for Intellectual
Property.
2303.2 The Copyright Law
- Copyright ownership and subject matter
- Copyright law gives an author the exclusive right to reproduce, sell,
distribute, revise, display, perform, broadcast or record a work. Any
reproduction or other use of a work either must be done with the permission
of the copyright owner or must be permitted by an exception contained
in the Copyright Act.
- Copyright protection extends to original works of authorship fixed
in any tangible medium, including books, journals, newspapers,
articles, audiovisual materials, computer programs, literary works, musical
compositions, lyrics, graphic works, sculptures, other works or the visual
arts, dramatic works, choreography, sound recordings and architectural
works.
- Copyright protection does not cover works in the public domain, ideas,
facts, mathematical formulas, measuring devices, blank forms, or works
of the U.S. government. However, the mere fact that a work is factual
in nature, or discuss mathematical formulas, does not mean that the work
as a whole is unprotected.
- Duration of Copyright
- Under current U.S. law, copyright
protection for a work remains in force throughout the life of the
author and until the end of the 70th year following his or her death.
If a work is authored by more than one individual, copyright protection
lasts until the end of the 70th year following the death of the last
surviving author.
- In cases where the work constitutes a work for hire
(i.e., a work where a company is considered the author, rather
than an individual), copyright protection
remains in effect until the end of the 95th year following the first publication,
or until the end of the 120th year following the creation, whichever expires
first. The same durations apply to anonymous and pseudonymous works, unless
the identity of one or more authors is revealed in Copyright Office
records, in which
case the durations set forth above apply.
- Effect of Copyright Notice: At one time, works that were published
in the United States without copyright notice were considered dedicated
to the public domain. However, with the passage of the Berne Convention
Act of 1988, copyright notice is no longer required to obtain or retain
copyright protection. Consequently, the better approach is to assume
that a work is protected by copyright unless you have a clear basis on
which to determine that it is not protected.
- Fair Use
The fair-use provision is presented as Section
107 of Title 17 of the United States Code. This section of the law
allows limited reproduction and use of copyrighted materials without the
copyright
holder's permission and without payment of a fee. Fair use may allow for
limited copying or other use of materials for purposes such as criticism,
comment, news reporting, teaching (including multiple copies for classroom
use),
scholarship, or research. If the limits of fair use are exceeded, permission
of the copyright owner must be obtained to permit reproduction or other
use of materials.
- Although one purpose of the fair use doctrine is to recognize that
some copying and distribution of works in educational settings should
be permitted without the permission of the copyright owner, it does
not exempt all copying and use of protected works merely because they
occur in an educational context. Instead, determining whether a particular
use is a fair use involves a consideration of a number of factors, including
the following:
- The purpose and character of the use, including
whether such use is of a commercial nature or is for nonprofit educational
purposes.
- The nature of the copyrighted work.
- The amount and substantiality of the portion used in relation
to the copyrighted work as a whole.
- The effect of the use upon the potential market for or value
of the copyrighted work.
- Recognizing that the fair use doctrine is often difficult to apply,
guidelines have been developed to help educators determine whether a
particular use is a fair use. These guidelines cover:
- copying printed materials for use in classrooms
[see 2303.10];
- copying or using musical compositions in educational settings [see
2303.9], and
- recording broadcast
programs for use in the classroom [see 2303.3(a)].
- Other Exceptions:
In addition to the uses permitted by fair use, the Copyright Act
identifies several other specific uses
which are allowed without obtaining specific permission from the
copyright
owner. These uses relate to the following:
- copying by libraries for patron use [see 2303.6(d)];
- copying by libraries as part of the interlibrary loan process
[see 2303.6(e)], and
- backup copies of computer software [see 2303.5(a)].
2303.3 Audio and Video Recordings
- Off-Air Recordings
These guidelines apply to individuals taping programs at home or at
other informal sites for classroom use. These guidelines only pertain
to the recording of programs that are transmitted without charge by television
stations for reception by the general public. They do not pertain to
the recording of programs broadcast on cable channels or satellite channels.
- A broadcast program may be recorded off air simultaneously with broadcast
transmissions (including simultaneous cable retransmission) and retained
for a period not to exceed the first 45 consecutive calendar days after
date of recording. Upon conclusion of such retention period, all off-air
recordings must be erased or destroyed immediately.
- Off-air recordings may be used once by individual teachers in the course
of relevant teaching activities and may be repeated once only when instructional
reinforcement is necessary, in classrooms and similar places devoted to
instruction during the first ten consecutive school days of the retention
period. "School days" are school session days, not counting weekends,
holidays, vacations, examination periods, or other scheduled interruptions.
- Off-air recordings may only be requested and used by individual teachers
and may not be regularly recorded in anticipation of requests. No broadcast
program may be recorded off air more than once at the request of the same
teacher, regardless of the number of times the program may be broadcast.
- A limited number of copies may be reproduced from each off-air recording
to meet the legitimate needs of teachers under these guidelines. Each
such additional copy shall be subject to all provisions of the original
recording.
- After the first ten consecutive school days, off-air recordings may
be used up to the end of the retention period of 45 consecutive calendar
days, only for evaluating and determining whether or not to include the
program in the teaching curriculum. It may not be used in the recording
institution for student exhibition or any other nonevaluation purpose
without authorization.
- Off-air recordings need not be used in their entirety, but the recorded
programs may not be altered from their original content. Off-air recordings
may not be physically or electronically combined or merged to constitute
teaching anthologies or compilations.
- All copies of off-air recordings must include copyright notice on the
broadcast program as recorded.
- Tapes recorded by the Center for Teaching and Learning must be returned
to the Center for Teaching and Learning after the first ten consecutive
school days. The Center for Teaching and Learning will retain them for
the remainder of the 45-day limit and will assist departments in obtaining
licensing or will erase accordingly.
- Transfers, Duplication and Editing
Transfers of other formats (film, slides, etc.) to a videotape format, duplication of a videotape, and editing of videotapes
require written permission from the copyright holder, unless the work is no longer protected by copyright.
- Teleconferencing
Teleconferences will be received by satellite after proper clearances
and permissions are obtained. Such teleconferences may be recorded for
future use only with written permission from the copyright holder.
- TV Production
Programs produced by the Wright State University Center for Teaching
and Learning for live or taped broadcast, classroom use, or distribution
must have clearances for all copyrighted materials included in these
programs, as well as signed clearances from participants.
- Videotaping of Performances or Events
- Videotaping of any performance on Wright State University campus will
be done only with all clearances and permissions in writing. These clearances
must state the intended use of the videotape (for example, classroom use,
recruiting, and resumes).
- If a performance or event is considered public domain in all aspects
(music, arrangements, script, etc.), the Center for Teaching and Learning
will videotape the performance or event.
- Use of Audiovisual Recordings in Classrooms
Instructors, students and guest lecturers may play motion pictures or other audiovisual
works in the course of face-to-face teaching activities in a classroom or similar
instructional setting, provided that the copy of the work is a lawfully-made
copy (or that the person playing the recording did not know or has no reason
to believe that the copy was not lawfully-made) and provided that viewing the
work is part of the instructional program.
2303.4 Bookstores
Employees are expected to adhere to copyright policy
and guidelines in the duplication or printing of classroom materials and placement
of such materials by the publications rotary administrator (Printing Service)
for commercial sale. Employees should contact Printing Service for copyright
information regarding classroom materials.
- Copyright Clearance
- Faculty/departments should review the copyrighted content (if any) of
class packets and submit the appropriate form along with the manuscript
to the rotary administrator.
- The copyright coordinator in Printing Service must obtain written permission
from the copyright holder before the material can be reproduced and subsequently
sold.
- Acquisition of copyright permission is often a complex and time-consuming
process; therefore, adequate time should be allowed for processing. Some
permissions are granted immediately; others may take up to eight weeks
or even longer. Further, the copyright owner is under no obligation to
grant permission to use the work. Accordingly, faculty may wish to develop
contingency plans in the event that permission cannot be obtained or
cannot be obtained in a timely manner.
2303.5 Computer Software
Much computer software is protected by copyright,
and is only licensed, not sold, to the user. For purposes of copyright, each
version of software may be copyrighted separately, i.e., if the holder of copyright
in the software develops and publishes a new release of the software, and the
user wishes to use the new version, a separate license is usually required
for each user. A purchaser of a software license does not acquire ownership
of the software, but instead gains the right to use only the single purchased
copy of the software.
- Backup Copy: The copyright law permits a licensee to make an additional
copy of the software for backup purposes, though any backup copy must be
destroyed if the purchaser transfers the software to another owner. Where
the University licenses the software, only the University, and not the
individual using the software, is entitled to make the backup copy.
- Prohibitions and Areas of Caution
- In many instances, use of software may be restricted by the terms of
the license. For example, use of software may be restricted to a particular
computer at a particular site. In addition, use of the software may be
limited to specific purposes. In these circumstances, permission of the
copyright owner must be acquired if the purchaser wishes to use the software
on a different computer at a different site, or for any other purpose
not permitted by the license.
- In the case of some software, the university may purchase a site license,
which will permit the use of the software on more than one computer at
the University. It is usually in the best interest of
the university to purchase a site license
when such a plan is available. However, the number of computers that
the software can be used on is regulated by the license, and the mere
fact that the University has purchased a site license does not mean that
the software can be used on any computer on campus.
- Individual employees who acquire software for their personal use with
regard to their duties at Wright State University must secure any necessary
licenses, and must supply printed copies of such licenses to the University
before installing the software on University computers. If the software
is purchased by Wright State University, any licenses will be in the
name of the institution. Employees may not make copies of software
programs for associates, but they may transfer their use to a colleague
after receiving permission from the University to do so. In doing so,
the original user loses the right to continued use of the software and
may not retain any copy or make any further use of the software.
- If the university supplies licensed software to students in the course
of instruction in a classroom, then sufficient licenses must be held by
the university for all computers in that classroom.
- If the university supplies licensed software to students in the course
of instruction in other than a classroom situation, sufficient licenses
must be held by the university for all students in the class and for the
instructor.
- If more than one class is using licensed software during the same quarter,
sufficient licenses must be held by the university for all such classes.
- Shareware is easily identifiable through explicit statements within
the software documentation, or identification is displayed on the computer
screen. Unless these explicit statements identify the software as shareware,
the user may assume that they may not be duplicated. Even if software
is shareware, the copyright owner may have placed restrictions or limitation
on the duplication and use of the software.
- The user should not assume that software not containing a copyright
notice is in the public domain and may be copied freely. The user should
consult with Computing and Telecommunications Services to ensure that
the software to be copied is in the public domain.
2303.6 University Library
- Section 108
of Title 17 of the United States Code of the copyright law
identifies the conditions under which libraries may reproduce
copyrighted works for their own use [see 2303.6(c)], to satisfy the needs
of patrons [see 2303.6(d)], and for interlibrary loan purposes
[refer to 2303.6 (e)]. To qualify for these exemptions, all of the following
conditions must be met:
- the library’s collection must be open to the public, or otherwise
available to persons doing research;
- the copying must be done without
any direct or indirect commercial advantage;
- any copies made must include
the original notice of copyright or a statement that the work may be
protected by copyright, and
- the library must not have reason to believe
it is engaging in the related or concerted reproduction or distribution
of multiple copies
of the same material, whether made on one occasion or over a period
of time.
- Copyrighted textual works may be reproduced by or for faculty members
for classroom use without obtaining permission, provided that the circumstances
conform to fair use as outlined in these guidelines [see 2303.10].
- Libraries are permitted to make copies for their own use, or for
use by another library whose collection is open to the public, as follows:
- For
published works, a library may make up to three copies of a particular
work in order to replace a damaged, lost, stolen or obsolete copy
in the library’s own collection, provided that an unused replacement
cannot be obtained through normal commercial channels at a fair price.
(A copy
is considered obsolete if it is a particular format and the device
used to read that format is no longer manufactured or reasonably available.)
- For unpublished works,
a library may make up to three copies of a particular work found in its
own collection for the purpose or preservation or deposit with
another library whose collection is open to the public.
- Libraries are permitted
to make digital copies of works as replacement copies or for preservation,
but such copies may not be made available to the public
in digital form outside the premises of the library.
- Libraries are permitted to make copies for patron use as follows:
- The work to be copied must be in the collection of the library,
and that collection must be open to the public.
- Only certain types of works can be copied for patron use. Generally,
the only permissible works are textual works (books, articles, etc.).
Section
108 of the Copyright Act does not allow libraries to make copies
of musical works; pictorial, graphic or sculptural works (except for
pictorial
and graphic material that is part of a textual work, such as photographs
or illustrations that are part of an article), or motion pictures or
other audiovisual works. Copies of sound recordings can be made, as
long as the recording is not of a musical work or is of a musical work
no longer protected by copyright.
-
The library must display, at the place where orders are accepted,
and must include in its order form, a notice concerning copyright restrictions,
as set forth below:
NOTICE: Warning Concerning Copyright Restrictions
The Copyright law of the United States (Title 17, United States Code)
governs the making of photocopies or other reproductions of copyrighted
material.
Under certain conditions specified in the law, libraries, and archives are
authorized to furnish a photocopy or other reproduction. One of these
specified conditions is that the photocopy or reproduction is not to be “used for any purpose other than private study, scholarship, or research.”
If a user makes a request for, or later uses, a photocopy or reproduction
for purposes in excess of “fair use,” that user may be liable for copyright
infringement.
This institution reserves the right to refuse to accept a copying order if, in
its judgment, fulfillment of the order would involve violation of
copyright law.
- The copy must become the property of the requestor, and the library must
have no notice that it will be used for any purpose other than scholarship or
research.
- Only a single copy of a work may be made for a given requestor.
- A library is permitted to make a copy of no more than one
article or other contribution to a collection or periodical, or small
part of any other
copyrighted work, provided that the library is not engaging in the systematic
reproduction and distribution of the entire work.
- Where a patron requests a copy of the entire work, a library is permitted
to make a copy only if it has determined, after a reasonable investigation, that
a copy of the work cannot be obtained at a fair price.
- Libraries also are permitted to request copies of materials from other
libraries for their patrons, and make copies for use by patrons of other
libraries, through the practice of interlibrary loans. Any copies made
for interlibrary loan purposes must comply with the restrictions set forth
in 2303.6(d). In addition, for works not in the library’s own collection,
the library must abide by the following restrictions:
- Any copies obtained through interlibrary loans must become the property
of the patron who requested the material, and cannot be retained by the
library as part of its collection.
- The library may not request, within the
same calendar year, more than five copies of any article or articles published
in a particular periodical
during the five years prior to the date of the request. The limitation
of five copies is not tied to a particular article or issue, but to the
periodical in general.
- For works other than periodicals, the library may not request, within
the same calendar year, more than five copies of or from a single work.
- The library must retain records of all requests it has made, as well
as records of fulfillment of these requests, until the end of the third
calendar year following the year in which the request was made.
- The library must send, along with any requests for copies sent to other
libraries, a statement that the request is made in conformity with the
guidelines in Section 108 of the Copyright Act.
- The library may not fulfill requests from any other libraries unless
the request is accompanied by a representation from the requesting library
that the request is made in conformity with the guidelines in Section 108.
- A library may reproduce and lend a limited number of copies and excerpts
from an audiovisual news program. "News program," in this context,
refers to local, regional or national news programs, but not to documentary
programs, magazine format programs, or other public affairs broadcasts.
- During the last 20 years of the term of copyright in a work [see 2303.2(a)(4)
for a discussion of the duration of copyright protection], a library may
reproduce, distribute, display or perform a copy of a work (including a
digital copy), or portions thereof, for purposes of preservation, scholarship
or research, provided that the library has determined, after a reasonable
investigation, that:
- the work was published by or with the authorization of the copyright
owner;
- the work is not subject to normal commercial exploitation;
- a copy cannot
be obtained at a reasonable price; and
- the copyright owner has not provided
notice to the Copyright Office that the work is subject to normal commercial
exploitation or that
copies can be obtained at a reasonable price. The Copyright Office
maintains a searchable database on its web site that can be used to determine
whether
this notice was filed for a particular work.
- A library and its employees
are exempt from liability for the unsupervised use of card- and coin-operated
photocopiers located on the premises, provided
that such equipment displays a copyright warning notice.
2303.7 Media
Wright State University media,
including student media,
have full rights to freedom of speech and of the press. However, media must
adhere to legal restrictions, including the law of copyright. The following
guidelines apply to university media's use of material under copyright:
- Print media may not reproduce copyrighted materials without written permission
of the copyright owner, clear identification of the source, and, if applicable,
copyrighted
status of the material, printed in association with the material. This
prohibition includes but is not limited to photoduplication of or other
reproduction
of lyrics from music, poetry, photographs, designs, art works, illustrations,
and reports not commissioned by the media or documents prepared outside
the direction of the media.
- Broadcast media must obtain appropriate licensing agreements prior to
broadcast of material under copyright.
- Wright State University media may reproduce or otherwise use
the following without obtaining permission:
- works not protected by copyright or otherwise in the public domain;
- original works commissioned by Wright State University media, provided
that Wright State University media has acquired copyright in the work
or a license to reproduce or use the work in the manner proposed; and,
- reports composed for Wright State University media by employees
of the Wright State University media.
2303.8 Center for Teaching and Learning
The Center for Teaching and Learning receives many requests
that involve the reproduction of copyrighted materials. The Center’s
policy is to evaluate each request in terms of the fair-use provisions of the
copyright law, and it reserves the right to refuse to reproduce any materials
that may result in a potential violation of the copyright law. The types of
requests that the department will accept are listed below.
In all cases, the
reproduction, in any form, of a copyrighted work by
the Center for Teaching and Learning may only be for the instructional, scholarly,
or research-related activities of Wright State University.
- Copying or reproduction of any materials for which a letter
of permission from the copyright holder is on file with
the Center for Teaching and Learning, or for which the requester can supply
written permission from the copyright owner.
- Copying or reproduction of any materials in any format where the work
is demonstrably in the public domain.
- Copying or reproduction in any format of material created in its entirety
by the requestor.
- Video recordings in classrooms, labs, or other campus facilities of faculty
presentations (lectures, demonstrations, etc.), provided that the recording
of the presentation does not include the recording of copyrighted material
that might be included as part of the presentation.
- Reproduction from any data source onto a hard-copy unit, providing the
data do not contain copyrighted material, and provided that the compilation
of the data is not protected by copyright law.
2303.9 Musical Compositions
The following guidelines apply only to use or reproduction of a musical composition.
They do not exempt completely uses of recorded music, which involve both a
copyright in the musical composition and a copyright in the recording of the
composition.
- Copyrighted musical compositions may be copied under the following circumstances:
- It is emergency copying to replace purchased copies that are not available
for an imminent performance, provided purchased replacement copies shall
be substituted in due course.
- Single or multiple copies of excerpts may be made for academic purposes
other than performance, provided (a) the excerpts do not comprise a part
of the whole that could constitute a performable unit, such as a section,
movement or aria; (b) such copying does not exceed 10 percent of the
work and (c) that no more than one copy per student is made.
- Printed copies that have been purchased may be edited or simplified,
provided that the fundamental character of the work is not distorted or
the lyrics altered or added.
- A single copy of recordings of performances by students may be made
for evaluation purposes and may be retained by the institution or instructor.
- The following prohibitions apply to the use of musical compositions in
educational settings:
- Copies shall not be made to create or replace or substitute for anthologies,
compilations, or collective works.
- Copies shall not be made of or from works intended to be consumable
in the course of study or in teaching, such as workbooks, exercises,
standardized tests and answer sheets, and like material.
- Copies shall not be made for the purpose of performance, except for
emergency copying as described in 2303.9(a)(1)
- Copies shall not be made for the purpose of substituting for the purchase
of music, except for
emergency copying as described in 2303.9(a)(1) and for copies of excerpts
as described I 2303.9(a)(2).
- Copies shall not be made without inclusion of the copyright notice
that appears on the printed copy.
2303.10 Copies of Printed Material for Classroom Use in Nonprofit Educational Institutions
- A single copy of any of the following materials
may be made by or for an instructor upon request, to be used for scholarly
research or for use in teaching or preparation for teaching.
- A chapter from a book.
- An article from a periodical or newspaper.
- A short story, short essay, or short poem, whether or not from a collective
work.
- A chart, graph, diagram, drawing, cartoon, or picture from a
book or periodical or newspaper.
- Multiple copies of printed works protected by copyright law
may be made by or for an instructor
for classroom use, provided that all of the following apply:
- the copies will be used in classroom teaching for only one course during
one academic quarter.
- no more than one copy is made per student in a particular course.
- the copying meets the test of brevity:
- For poetry, a complete poem if less than 250
words and if printed on no more than two pages, or an excerpt from a
longer poem, provided the excerpt is not more than 250 words. (These
limits can be expanded to permit the completion of an unfinished line
of a poem.)
- For prose (excluding special works as described in (d) below),
a complete article, story, or essay if less than 2,500 words, or
an excerpt from a longer prose work, provided that the excerpt is not
more than 1000 words and not more than 10 percent of the work (unless
the 10 percent threshold would limit the excerpt to less than 500
words,
in which case the excerpt can be 500 words long). (These limits can
be expanded to permit the completion of an unfinished paragraph.)
- For
illustrations, one chart, graph, diagram, drawing, cartoon or picture
per book or periodical issue.
- For special works (such as works in poetry,
prose, or poetic prose, which combine language with illustrations
and which fall short of 2,500 words in their entirety),
an excerpt comprising not more than two of the published
pages of such special work and containing not more than 10 percent
of the words found in the text thereof.
- the copying meets the test of spontaneity:
- It is at the instance and inspiration of the
instructor.
- The inspiration and decision to use the work and the moment
of its use for maximum teaching effectiveness are so close in time that
it would be unreasonable to expect a timely reply to a request for
permission.
- the copying meets the cumulative effect test:
- The copied material is used for only one course.
- The copying does not
involve more than one work (or two excerpts) from the same author,
or more than three from the same collective work
or periodical volume per class term. (This limitation is waived with
respect to current news periodicals and newspapers, and current news
sections of other periodicals.)
- No more than nine instances of multiple
copying occur per class term. (This limitation is waived with respect
to current news periodicals
and newspapers, and current news sections of other periodicals.)
- a notice of copyright is included on the first page of each photocopy.
- The following prohibitions apply to copying for classroom use:
- Copies shall not be made to create or to replace or to substitute for
anthologies, compilations, or collective works.
- Copies shall not be made of or from works intended to be consumable
in the course of study or teaching. These works include workbooks, exercises,
standardized tests, and test booklets and answer sheets.
- Copies shall not be made to substitute for the purchase of books, publishers'
reprints, or periodicals.
- Copying shall not be repeated with respect to the same item by the same
teacher term to term.
- No charge shall be made to the student beyond the actual costs of the
photocopying.
- Authority figures (e.g., teachers and supervisors) shall not direct
students or employees under their supervision to perform actions that
are in violation of copyright law or fair use guidelines.
2303.11 Use of Copyrighted Works in Distance Learning
Section 110(2) of the Copyright Act permits use of certain works in distance
learning settings, including online courses, without obtaining permission from
the copyright owner. A number of restrictions and regulations govern the types
of works that can be used and how those works can be used and transmitted as
part of the course.
If an instructor wishes to use a work in a manner not permitted under the Section
110(2) exception, the instructor must obtain written permission from the copyright
owner to include the material in the distance learning course.
- Types of Works Covered by the Exception
- Except for those works identified in 2303.11(a)(2), instructors can
include performances of non dramatic literary or musical works as part
of a distance learning course. Instructors may also include performances
or displays of reasonable and limited portions of all types of works
(including dramatic works and audiovisual works), as part of a distance
learning course, provided that the use of the material is in an amount
comparable to that typically used in a live classroom session.
- Instructors cannot use works that are produced or marketed primarily
for use in distance learning courses without first obtaining permission
from the copyright owner. Further, instructors cannot include works such
as textbooks, course packs or other works that are typically purchased
by the student for use in the class. Finally, instructors cannot use
or include works if their source copy is not a lawfully made and acquired
copy.
- Manner of Use
- The performance or display of the work must be made by, at the direction
of, or under the actual supervision of the instructor.
- The performance
or display of the work must be an integral part of a discreet class session,
and cannot be made generally available for
access by students.
- The performance or display of the work must be directly related to
the teaching content of the course.
- The performance or display must be analogous to that which might occur
in a traditional classroom setting. Accordingly, instructors may not upload full works or excerpts from works to a web site for students to
access throughout their enrollment in the course.
- Transmission of Works
- Transmission of the works must be made solely for reception by students
officially enrolled in the course. Technological measures, such as password-protecting
the material transmitted, must be used to prevent unauthorized access
to the materials.
- Each transmission of the work must include a clear warning that materials
included in the course may be subject to copyright protection.
- In the case of digital transmissions, including transmissions made
via the Internet, technological measures must be used to prevent retention
of the work by the recipients, further distribution or dissemination
of the work by the recipients, or other use beyond use as part of the
class session in which the work is incorporated. If the work was distributed
by the copyright owner with restrictive codes, embedded management systems,
or other technological safeguards designed to prevent such retention
or unauthorized distribution, the University cannot take any steps that
could reasonably interfere with those safeguards.
- Making Copies of Works for Transmission
- The University may make digital copies of works available in digital
form for the purpose of including those copies in a distance learning
course, provided that the digital copies are retained by the University
and used solely for transmissions authorized under the exception in
Section 110(2), and that no further copies are made from the digital
copy.
- The University may make digital copies of works not available
in digital form for the purpose of including those copies in a distance
learning
course, provides that the University converts no more of the work into
digital format as may be used in the course [see 2303.11(a)(1)], and
provided that no digital version of the works is available for purchase,
or any digital version available has technological measures that prevent
its use in compliance with the guidelines outlined above.
- Retention of Copies of Materials Transmitted
- The University may retain copies of the digital transmissions that
comprise a distance learning class or course, including copies of any
copyrighted materials incorporated therein, provided that the copies
of the transmissions are retained and used solely by the University.
- Any
copies of transmissions retained by the University can only be used
for further transmissions of the distance learning course in
accordance with the guidelines set forth above. No copies can be made
from the retained material, except for copies made and used in further
distance education courses, provided those courses comply with the
guidelines set forth above.
- Copies of transmissions for a particular course cannot be retained
by individual instructors. The copies of the transmissions must retain
the property of and under the control of the University.
2303.12 Other Online Materials
- The University is not responsible for the content of unofficial web sites
or other online material hosted on the University’s servers. [For
a clarification of what constitutes an “unofficial web site,” see
2001.3.] To the extent that faculty, staff, students and other persons
associated with Wright State University create unofficial web sites, the
University expects that the persons responsible for the web site content
will abide with applicable copyright laws regarding the use of copyrighted
materials.
- The University also does not control and is not responsible for the
content of any web sites created by faculty or graduate student employees
where such web sites are tied to genuine teaching or research activities,
except that such web sites cannot include copies of or access to instructional
material that are or were required or recommended, within the preceding
three years, for a course taught at Wright State by the faculty member
or graduate student. Otherwise, the University expects that the faculty
member or graduate student responsible for the web site content will abide
with applicable copyright laws regarding the use of copyrighted materials.
- Notwithstanding the foregoing, the University may take down or disable
access to any unofficial web sites, web sites maintained by faculty members
or graduate student employees, or other online material, if the University
receives a notice from a copyright owner, in compliance with Section 512
(c)(3) of the Copyright Act, that material on the web site infringes a
copyrighted work. Wright State's actions in taking down such material
are in compliance with the provisions of the Digital Millennium Copyright
Act, as set forth on the copyright information page of the University's
web site, http://wright.edu/web/copyright.html.
- If the University receives a proper notification, it will act expeditiously
to remove or disable access to the allegedly-infringing material.
- Upon taking such action, the University will notify the person associated
with or responsible for the web site or other online posting that it
has removed or disabled access to the site. This notice will be sent
via e-mail to the e-mail address associated with person responsible for
the web site.
- The person who posted the material covered by the notification can
file a counter-notification with the University, setting forth the reasons
why the material should not be taken down. To be effective, the notice
must comply with the following:
- It must be in writing, and must be submitted to Gwen M. Mattison,
General Counsel for Wright State University. The written notice may
be submitted in person or by regular mail to the Office of General
Counsel
(356 University Hall, Wright State University, Dayton, OH 45435-0001),
or by electronic mail to gwen.mattison@wright.edu.
- The notice must include the user’s name, address and phone
number.
- The notice must identify the material that has been taken down, as
well as the location where the material appeared before it was taken
down.
- The notice must include a statement, made by the user under penalty
of perjury, that he or she has a good faith belief that the material
was taken down as a result of a mistake or misidentification of the
material to be removed.
- The notice must include a statement that the user consents to the
jurisdiction of a federal district court to resolve the matter, and
that the user will accept service of process from the complaining
party or
its agent.
- The notice must be signed by the user, either physically or electronically.
- Upon receiving such notice from the user, the University will promptly
forward a copy of the notice to the copyright owner who complained
of the infringement, and will then replace or restore access to
the material
between the 10th and 14th business day following the date the notice
is forwarded to the copyright owner, unless it receives further notice
that the copyright owner has filed a court action against the user
relating to the material in question.
-
In the event that the University receives two genuine
notifications of claims of infringement related to a particular faculty
member
or graduate student employee within a three-year period,
the University will not
permit that faculty member or graduate student employee to
maintain a web site on the University’s servers until both instances
of claimed infringement are more than three years in the
past.
2303.13 Technological Protection Measures
Some copyright owners use technological protection measures, including passwords,
restrictive codes, embedded management systems, and other devices, that are
designed to prevent unauthorized access to a copyrighted work and/or unauthorized
copying of a copyrighted work. The University and its employees shall not circumvent
any technological protection measures designed to restrict access to a work,
except in the following circumstances:
- The University and its employees may circumvent access control measures
in order to make a good faith determination of whether to obtain authorized
access to the work, provided that:
- the copy accessed is not retained longer than necessary to make
such a determination;
- the copy accessed is not used for any purpose
other than making the
determination, and
- an identical copy of the work is not reasonably available in another
form that can be reviewed without circumventing the access control
measures.
- The
University and its employees may circumvent access control measures on
computer programs, provided the University has a license to use the
computer program, that the measures are circumvented solely for the purpose
of identifying and analyzing elements of the program necessary to achieve
interoperability with other programs, and that the steps taken are otherwise
permissible under copyright law.
2303.14 Filesharing Using University Resources
University computers and its servers may not be used to engage in filesharing
in violation of copyright law. Filesharing is the sending or accessing of files
on a remote computer, often involving filesharing applications such as KaZaA,
Gnutella or Morpheus. While such programs have lawful purposes, use of these
and other similar programs could involve illegal duplication or distribution
when copyrighted works are involved.
- Filesharing is permitted only when it is done in compliance with applicable
copyright law. Accordingly, filesharing is permitted only when
- the individual sharing the work is the owner of copyright in the
work being shared (e.g., the work was created in its entirety by the
individual);
- the owner of copyright in the work has given permission
for the work to
be copied and distributed through filesharing;
- the material shared is in
the public domain; or
- distribution of the material through filesharing falls within
the fair use exception or another exception contained in the Copyright
Act. However, the mere
fact that the use of certain material in a classroom or research project
may be fair use or fall within another exception does not necessarily
mean that duplicating
and transmitting the work through filesharing is also permitted under
those exceptions.
- Some filesharing programs are set, by default, to transmit and share any files
of a certain type on the computer whenever the computer is running. Anyone using
these programs must either set the program not to share files in this manner,
or must ensure that they have explicit permission from the copyright owners to
share all of the files associated with the filesharing program.