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#71
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![]() Chad Irby wrote: In article , Vince Brannigan wrote: Chad Irby wrote: Vince Brannigan wrote: (the relevant law is attached to the end of this post) Remember news stories are not copyrighted newspapers are. Nope. Each story in a joint work is copyrighted separately. but not sold separately. Actually, yes, sold separately. This story is available for the syndication market, by itself. And since you obviously don't know this: a work does not even have to be *published* to be covered under copyright. It si still sold as aprt of a newspaper. of course since this was the harpur and roe decsion involving the Nixon pardon. This newspaper is the "copyrighted work as a whole" that is what has a market. Sorry, that's not how copyright works. It depends on where the copying took place. Posting less-substantial pieces, maybe. Posting the whole article, without previous permissions from the owner, is a copyright violation. nonsense. There is also the test of immediacy. So you're completely wrong about copyright on at least two points. Note that the law does *not* say "pick one of these reasons and completely ignore the rest," it says "shall include." Its a common 4 factor test. How a court weighs one factor agsint another depends on the Court. I dont think you will find any apellate decisons holding that such a posting is a violation by the individual. RIAA versus all of those people swapping MP3s. Since you contend that a single song is not covered like a whole album, then someone bootlegging songs on Napster would have been free and clear. I siad in the tradtional view. it is clear that electronic copying has changed both the technolgy and the law with regard to music. You seem to think I care. I don't. Even if you're really a lawyer, you're obviously not well informed about copyright laws. As you point out, internet is an excellet palce for textaul analysis and commentary. that is why users has a correspondingly large right to "fair use" "Fair use" would have been a paragraph, or a summary of the story involved, with a link the the original. What you do is pretty much just laziness. its simply not required. if tehre was a respectable appellate cite supproting your positon Im sure you would have presented it. Vince |
#72
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On Fri, 12 Sep 2003 22:10:10 GMT, Chad Irby wrote:
Vince Brannigan wrote: Im a law professor. I teach this stuff. If you are, the students shold chip in and buy you a keyboard with an apostrophe key. im bothered by anyone who misuses the limited monopoly provided by the copyright law And the rest of us are bothered by someone claiming to be an expert on something spouting obvious falsehoods... Much as I hate to say it, Vince is absolutely correct on this issue. There is also an academic exemption. Fair use has been around for many years. And Vince, I know that you do not need me to support your thesis, but I just wanted to stick my two cents worth in :-) Al Minyard |
#74
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Vince Brannigan wrote:
Chad Irby wrote: Actually, yes, sold separately. This story is available for the syndication market, by itself. And since you obviously don't know this: a work does not even have to be *published* to be covered under copyright. It si still sold as aprt of a newspaper. And it still doesn't invalidate the copyright for the individual article. of course since this was the harpur and roe decsion involving the Nixon pardon. Actually, the Harper and Row case was on the right of first publication ("confidentiality and creative control"), and went to use, not substantiality (even though there was a good substantiality argument because of the relevance of the quoted pieces). And even at that, the quoted piece was less than 400 words out of an entire *book*, much less than the 100% of a newspaper article quoted here. It depends on where the copying took place. According to US law it doesn't as long as you're in the US when you did it. Posting less-substantial pieces, maybe. Posting the whole article, without previous permissions from the owner, is a copyright violation. nonsense. There is also the test of immediacy. Nope. As long as it's still under copyright, it's covered. "Fair use" would have been a paragraph, or a summary of the story involved, with a link the the original. What you do is pretty much just laziness. its simply not required. if tehre was a respectable appellate cite supproting your positon Im sure you would have presented it. Princeton University Press versus Michigan Document Services, Inc. A company that made "coursepacks" for teachers got dinged on this one, despite only using bits and pieces of many smaller works. And I'm sure that if you really knew what you were talking about, being a lawyer and all, you'd be able to find a case that *didn't* go in favor of the plaintiff in fair use, instead of one that supports *my* point... -- Remember: Objects in rearview mirror may be hallucinations. Slam on brakes accordingly. |
#75
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In article ,
Alan Minyard wrote: On Fri, 12 Sep 2003 22:10:10 GMT, Chad Irby wrote: Much as I hate to say it, Vince is absolutely correct on this issue. Not according to the law that he quoted. There is also an academic exemption. Fair use has been around for many years. But not for entire articles, except under very specific constraints (in libraries and similar collections). Republishing the contents of an article on the Internet is completely out of that area. Under the academic exemption, he could probably get away with a more-substantial quote in an academic journal than if he was printing it in a local paper as part of a critique, but it's still very clear that reproducing an entire piece breaks substantiality. You'll also note this is a "rec" newsgroup, not an "ed" or "sci" one. -- Remember: Objects in rearview mirror may be hallucinations. Slam on brakes accordingly. |
#76
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Alan Minyard wrote:
On Sat, 13 Sep 2003 04:33:18 GMT, (Brian Allardice) wrote: In article , says... (1) the purpose and character of the use, including whether such use is of a commercial nature or is for nonprofit educational purposes; This could be fun... what about public schools run by for profit education companies? Is it Philadelphia, among others, where such a thing is going on? Not a problem. Private universities have been using the academic exemption for many years without a conflict. ....under very specific restrictions, and they have to retain some control of the work. They're also restricted in the number of copies they can make at any one time. Some of them have been caught with this, too, in making "sourcebooks" for teachers with large numbers of copyrighted works in a compilation. Many of the smart ones ante up the fee for reprinting the pieces (usually a nominal fee for this use), and pass the costs on to the students. Often, a local bookstore will make the arrangements for printing and fees. Read this, for a start: http://fairuse.stanford.edu/Copyrigh...w/chapter9/9-c ..html#1 The Religious Technology (Scientology) Center vs Lerma case is one of the most famous examples of someone getting in trouble for republishing materials on the Internet. The Religious Technology Center vs Pagliarina case is an example of *not* exceeding fair use. -- Remember: Objects in rearview mirror may be hallucinations. Slam on brakes accordingly. |
#77
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"John Mullen" wrote in news:KMd8b.5371$YL.2063@news-
binary.blueyonder.co.uk: Richard Bernstein, NYT Reprinted in the International Herald Tribune. U.S. is losing the sympathy of the world Do we give a rat's hinder? "Come the three quarters of the world in arms And we shall shock them" Shakespeare IBM __________________________________________________ ____________________ Posted Via Uncensored-News.Com - FAST UNLIMITED DOWNLOAD - http://www.uncensored-news.com The Worlds Uncensored News Source |
#78
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"Jim McLaughlin" wrote in
news:S2A8b.431325$Ho3.69216@sccrnsc03: Saudi royal funded Wahabbist crazies Since they are *Saudi* funded crazies, just why are you doing asking the rest of the world to march on Iraq rather than on Saudi Arabia? -- Coridon Henshaw / http://www3.sympatico.ca/gcircle/csbh |
#79
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Coridon Henshaw ) wrote:
:"Jim McLaughlin" wrote in :news:S2A8b.431325$Ho3.69216@sccrnsc03: : : Saudi royal funded Wahabbist crazies : :Since they are *Saudi* funded crazies, just why are you doing asking the :rest of the world to march on Iraq rather than on Saudi Arabia? Why are Lefties so unutterably stupid? I suppose you also wonder why we don't invade North Korea and Pakistan, right? -- "Some people get lost in thought because it's such unfamiliar territory." --G. Behn |
#80
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Not quite sure what your syntax was meant to convey ("...just why are you
doing asking...") as it seems quite meaningless. Can you try again in a language actually understandable by other humans? -- Jim McLaughlin ************************************************** ************************** ************************************************** ************************** I am getting really tired of spam, so the reply address is munged. Please don't just hit the reply key. Remove the obvious from the address to reply. ************************************************** ************************** ************************************************** ************************** Special treat for spambots: , , ************************************************** ************************* "Coridon Henshaw @ (TH+ESE) sympatico.ca)" (chenshawREMOVE wrote in message ... "Jim McLaughlin" wrote in news:S2A8b.431325$Ho3.69216@sccrnsc03: Saudi royal funded Wahabbist crazies Since they are *Saudi* funded crazies, just why are you doing asking the rest of the world to march on Iraq rather than on Saudi Arabia? -- Coridon Henshaw / http://www3.sympatico.ca/gcircle/csbh |
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