DO’S AND
DON'TS OF
COPYRIGHTING
Naomi JenkinsJon GambleNewspaper I
1st Block
OBJECTIVESTo inform you of the do’s when copyrighting
To inform you of the don’ts of copyrighting
And making sure you understand them
BRIEF HISTORY Copyright was invented after
the arrival of the printing press in Britain. The king of England and Scotland was concerned by the unregulated copyign of books and used royal prerogative to pass the Licensing Act of 1662 which established a register of licensed books and required a copy to be deposited with the StationersCompany.
In America it began under the Copyright Act of 1976.
DO’S. . .Do familiarize yourself with the
copyright law. You know, just to be safe.
When you do research, Do summarize and use your own words. The Copyright Act says that short quotations for criticism, commentary or news reporting are considered “fair use”. But don’t let it take up most of
YOUR work.
DO’S. . .Do use material under public
domain.Including federal government
documents, material the was produced before 1923 and material without a copyright notice before 1977.
Do buy all media from a legitimate store and/or website.i.e. iTunes.
Do use facts. The Copyright laws protects the form, combination, and structure of documents and not the facts themselves.
Don’t ignore the copyright law. When you see it, a red flag should pop up in your head warning you.
DO’S. . .
DON’TS. . .
DON’TS. . . Don’t assume that if
you credit the author you won’t get in trouble for copyright. You can only use copyrighted material if you have permission from the author to do so or if you make fair use of it.
When doing research, Don’t copy everything or close to everything that is not your work, word for word.
DON’TS. . .
And Don’t think just because you remove the copyright symbol and/or notice/message that you can use it. It is still copyrighted people. Be Smart!
Don’ t think that just because the copyright symbol and/or notice/message that it’s not copyrighted.
SUMMARY Familiarize yourself with the copyright law.
Summarize and use your own words. Use material under public domain. Buy media and stop using peer-to-peer websites to get it. Its ok to use facts. Don’t ignore the copyright law. Don’t think just because you remove the copyright symbol/message/notice it’s not copyrighted. And don’t think just because the symbol/message/notice isn’t there it’s not copyrighted. IT IS! Just because you credit the author it doesn’t mean that your not stealing. It’s still under the Copyright Law.
My advice-Just do your own work!
REVIEW! ! ! So if the copyright symbol isn’t on a picture
you take it and say it’s yours. People find out you get in trouble. Your were right to take the picture. True or False False
You can use information as long as you cite the author of the work. True or False False. Ask the author first.
You should familiarize yourself
CITATION Daniel Scocco. N.d. Copyright Law: 12 Do’s
and Don’ts. Retrieved on Dec. 2, 2009 at http://www.dailyblogtips.com/copyright-law-12-dos-and-donts/
G. Clement. (Jan. 17, 2009). Copyright Do’s and Don’ts. Retrieved on Dec. 2, 2009 at http://digitalcollections.fiu.edu/drag/COPYRIGHT.pdf
US Copyright Office. (July 2008). Copyright Basics. Retrieved on Dec. 2, 2009 at http://www.copyright.gov/circs/circ1.pdf
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