Students may use portions of lawfully acquired copyrighted works in their academic multimedia projects, with proper credit and citations. They may retain them in personal portfolios as examples of their academic work.
Students and teachers must include on the opening screen of their programs and on any printed materials that their presentation has been prepared under fair use exemption of the U.S. Copyright Law and are restricted from further use.
Educators may claim fair use for their own productions providing these productions are:
For face-to-face curriculum-based instruction
Demonstrations of how to create multimedia productions
Presented at conferences (but you may not share copies of the actual production)
For remote instruction as long as the distribution signal is limited
Kept for only 2 years
Fair use ends when the multimedia creator loses control of his product's use, such as when it is accessed by others over the Internet.
Educators or students need not write for permission if their presentation falls within the specific multimedia fair use
guidelines; however, "educators and students are advised to note that if there is a possibility that their own educational
multimedia project incorporating copyrighted works under fair use could later result in broader dissemination, whether
or not as commercial product, it is strongly recommended that they take steps to obtain permissions during the
development process for all copyrighted portions rather than waiting until after completion of the project.
So What Can I Use?
Text
Up to 10% of a copyrighted work or 1000 words, whichever is less
Poems
Entire poem if less than 250 words
250 words or less if longer poem
No more than 5 poems (or excerpts) of different poets, from an anthology
Only 3 poems (or excerpts) per poet
Motion Media
Up to 10% of a copyrighted work or 3 minutes, whichever is less
Clip cannot be altered in any way
Illustrations
A photograph or illustration may be used in its entirety
No more than 5 images of an artist's or photographer's work
When using a collection, no more than 10% or no more than 15 images, whichever is less
Photos cannot be rebroadcasted on the Internet (Ex: Podcasting)
Music
Up to 10% of a copyrighted musical composition, but no more than 30 seconds
Up to 10% of a body of sound recording, but no more than 30 seconds
Any alterations cannot change the basic melody or the fundamental character of the work
Internet
Internet resources often combine both copyrighted and public domain sites; therefore care should be used in downloading any sites for use in multimedia presentations.
Until further clarification, educators and students are advised to write for permission to use Internet resources and to be mindful of the copyright ramifications of including embedded additional links to that particular site.
Numerical Data Sets
Up to 10% or 2500 fields or cell entries, whichever is less, from a copyrighted database or data table
A field entry is defined as a specific item of information (e.g. name, Social Security number) in a record of a database file.
A cell entry is defined as the intersection where a row and a column meet on a spreadsheet
Copying and Distribution Limitations
Do not post multimedia projects claiming fair use exemption on an unsecured web site
No more than 2 copies of the original production may be made
Only 1 may be placed on reserve for others to use for instructional purposes
An additional copy may be made for preservation purposes, but may be used or copied only to replace a use copy that has been lost, damaged, or stolen
If more than one person has created the multimedia presentation, each principal creator may retain only one copy
Alteration Limitations
Multimedia selections falling within the above guidelines may be altered to illustrate a specific technique or to support a specific instructional objective
Notation of the alteration should be documented within the presentation itself
Multimedia Presentations Citations
Educators and students must credit sources, giving full bibliographic information when available.
Educators and students must display the copyright notice and copyright ownership information if this is shown in the original source.
Copyright information for images may be shown in a separate bibliographic section unless the presentation is being used for distance learning. In this case, the information must be incorporated within the image itself (i.e. it must appear on the screen when the image is viewed).
Copyright & Fair Use on the Web
For more information regarding Copyright & Fair Use, go to:
http://www.beckercopyright.com/index.html
http://www.mediafestival.org/downloads.html
General Fair Use Info
Educators may claim fair use for their own productions providing these productions are:
Educators or students need not write for permission if their presentation falls within the specific multimedia fair use
guidelines; however, "educators and students are advised to note that if there is a possibility that their own educational
multimedia project incorporating copyrighted works under fair use could later result in broader dissemination, whether
or not as commercial product, it is strongly recommended that they take steps to obtain permissions during the
development process for all copyrighted portions rather than waiting until after completion of the project.
So What Can I Use?
Text
Motion Media
Illustrations
Music
Internet
Numerical Data Sets
Copying and Distribution Limitations
Alteration Limitations
Multimedia Presentations Citations