This link has been bookmarked by 129 people . It was first bookmarked on 02 Mar 2006, by Danny Thorne.
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18 Aug 18
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08 May 16
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Heath D.A summary of the official Digital Millennium Copyright Act of 1998 published by the U.S. Copyright Office.
copyright DMCA Digital Millennium Copyright Act fair use higher education
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07 Apr 16
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25 Mar 16
janicelwestHas information about the DMCA that was signed into law in 1998 by President Bill Clinton. Summarizes the act and what is is with copyright laws
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17 Feb 15
Hallie MartinDigital Millennium Copyright Act of 1998
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07 Feb 15
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01 Dec 14
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02 Oct 14
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02 Sep 14
etrickThe
Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA)
was signed into law b
y
1
President
Clinton
on October 28, 1998. The legislation implements two 1996 World
I
ntellectua
l Property Organization (WIPO) treaties: the WIPO Copyright Treaty and
the
WIPO Performances and Phonograms Treaty. The DMCA also addresses
a
number of other significant copyright-related issues. -
10 Aug 14
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17 Jul 14
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10 May 14
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04 Apr 14
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16 Feb 14
LaChante Cross1. Currency (5/15): Site is dated and updated but article is lacking interactive
2. Content (15/15): Vastly informative, sets standards of argument.
3. Authority (3/10): No direct contact with unknown(group authorship), known origin
4. Navigation (10/10): Easy to get to and reproduce
5. Experience (5/10): Fulfills requirement with no gusto
6.Multimedia (2/10): Article is PDF file, site it's from diverse
7. Treatment (10/10): Professional and Legal
8. Access (5/5): Easy to get to and from
9. Miscellaneous (15/15): No interaction which makes it's an easier resource to consume, and the source is direct.
Overall Score: 70 Average -
10 Jan 14
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13 Dec 13
Numi StefanssonIntroduction to current standing copyright law, "The Digital Millennium Copyright of 1998" Credible source in many ways, citations, authors and more, but I use it here for a reference to prove my point.
4 -
11 Nov 13
Bryan Cash10/10 of the 10 c's I was able to verify all of the 10 c's
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10 Nov 13
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Matthew Bathurst1. Currency (5/15): Site is dated and updated but article is lacking interactive
2. Content (15/15): Vastly informative, sets standards of argument.
3. Authority (3/10): No direct contact with unknown(group authorship), known origin
4. Navigation (10/10): Easy to get to and reproduce
5. Experience (5/10): Fulfills requirement with no gusto
6.Multimedia (2/10): Article is PDF file, site it’s from diverse
7. Treatment (10/10): Professional and Legal
8. Access (5/5): Easy to get to and from
9. Miscellaneous (15/15): No interaction which makes it’s an easier resource to consume, and the source is direct.
Overall Score: 70 Average -
09 Nov 13
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08 Nov 13
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Phil McCoyThe Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA)1 was signed into law by
President Clinton on October 28, 1998. The legislation implements two 1996 World
Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) treaties: the WIPO Copyright Treaty and
the WIPO Performances and Phonograms Treaty. The DMCA also addresses a
number of other significant copyright-related issues. -
17 Oct 13
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14 Oct 13
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Donald RushingThis is the copyright office's website. the source is a summary of the DMCA. As the government agency responsible for the copyright system it maintain a high degree of credibility. Contact information is displayed on the home page as well as several others. the content is in PDF format.
Score 88
Content (0 to 15 Points) 15
Authority (0 to 10 Points)10
Navigation (0 to 10 Points) 10
Experience (0 to 10 Points) 8
Multimedia (0 to 10 Points) 0
Treatment (0 to 10 Points) 10
Access (0 to 5 Points) 5
Miscellaneous (0 to 15 Points) 15 -
13 Oct 13
Kyle HussettA complete copy of the DMCA.
--- Scoring ---
Content - Intent of the article is to provide info on the DMCA.
Credibility - Source is a piece of law.
Critical Thinking - A legal document is more than credible.
Copyright - Work is a law on copyright.
Citation - Work is cited appropriately and when needed.
Continuity - Site is still up amid a govt. shutdown. If that's not a good sign, I don't know what is.
Censorship - Site was free from censorship.
Connectivity - Both Chrome and Safari opened the page without issue.
Comparability - Legal code is going to be the same everywhere you look.
Context - Exactly what was sought.
Final score: 10 -
Steven Miller"one on
circumven
tion
of technological measures used by copyright owners to protect thei
r
w
orks and one on tampering wi
th copyright management information—and adds civil
remedies
and criminal penalties for violating the prohibitions. I" -
Dustin Stephens"one on
circumven
tion
of technological measures used by copyright owners to protect thei
r
w
orks and one on tampering wi
th copyright management information—and adds civil
remedies
and criminal penalties for violating the prohibitions. I" -
Brandon LopezA PDF Overview of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act
Ten C's Score: 10/10
1) Content - Author - Library of Congress
2) Credibility - This comes directly from the United States Government.
3) Critical Thinking - This is legitimate content.
4) Copyright - Copyrighted by the United States Copyright Office.
5) Citation - It is referring to the full document of the DMCA.
6) Continuity - This article will be updated by the government as needed.
7) Censorship - This is not censored content.
8) Connectivity - A user with a basic Web Browser and Internet Connection can access this.
9) Comparability - It's physical source would be the Full DMCA Article.
10) Context - This is highly relevant to my search on the Digital Millenium Copyright Act.
http://www.copyright.gov/legislation/dmca.pdf -
JD RiveraThis is not for the 10c evaluation however it does show the legal document for the Digital Millennium Copyright Act of 1998
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Ian Henderson1. Content (10/10) - Long and the entirety of a report concerning this act.
2. Credibility (10/10) - Information is incredibly credible as it is a full on report.
3. Critical Thinking (10/10) - Information is really good; consideration is there to be had in terms of the information you process at the end.
4. Copyright (10/10) - Copyright is present.
5. Citation (0/10) - No citations.
6. Continuity (0/10) - No continuity.
7. Censorship (10/10) - Absolutely zero censorship
8. Connectivity (10/10) - Instant connection and hassle-free access.
9. Comparability (0/10) - No additional or alternate versions are in existence for comparison.
10. Context (0/10) - No context is properly present. -
12 Oct 13
Devin MetivierTitle 3 gives an extension to section 117 of the Copyright Act allowing owners of a copy of a program to make reproductions of the program in the event of a need for maintenance or transfer.
Title 5 represents that a design under the VHDPA can be protected under the Copyright Act. Uses such terms like "attractive or distinctive in appearance" to indicate which articles of design would be protected under these provisions. -
11 Oct 13
Samantha Wolf10-This government document is very reliable due to the fact that it has come directly from the US Copyright Office, showing good credibility. It covers specific details of copyright law and its protocols and what it protects under certain conditions which add to its context, content, and comparability. The laws it outlines are still effective today ensuring continuity.
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Brian Meeth82: Good. I rated this source as good because while having a lot of information, the document is old, and has no sign of being updated anytime soon.
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10 Oct 13
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09 Oct 13
vanessa ibarraI belive this summary is very accuarte because it was released by the US government the people who made the law. I would give this source a score of 100 because it is the original source for information on this subject and proves how copyright law is important in digital law
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08 Oct 13
Ruby McDowellThis is a legal document.
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08 Aug 13
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30 Jul 13
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27 Feb 13
Rebecca BliquezFull summary of law which is long and somewhat legal-ese ish. The DMCA essentially provides limitations on the liability of online service providers for copyright infringement (especially useful when your site allows the public to post and stream others' copyrighted materials).
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28 Sep 11
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14 Mar 11
The Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA)1 was signed into law by
President Clinton on October 28, 1998. The legislation implements two 1996 World
Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) treaties: the WIPO Copyright Treaty and
the WIPO Performances and Phonograms Treaty. The DMCA also addresses a
number of other significant copyright-related issues. -
10 Mar 11
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28 Sep 10
Diego BecerraDerechos de autor en la era digital: "Digital Millennium Copyright Act"
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03 Mar 09
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16 Feb 09
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12 Feb 09
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31 Jul 08
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18 Jul 08
Barb PerlewitzThe Digital Millennium Copyright Act of 1998
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11 Jun 08
David JohnsonTHE DIGITAL MILLENNIUM COPYRIGHT ACT OF 1998
U.S. Copyright Office Summary -
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14 Nov 07
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02 Jul 07
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09 Feb 07
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15 Jun 06
Rachel Cah, invidious instrument
DMCA digital millennium copyright act US law legal IP legislation rights government policy filetype:pdf media:document
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22 Feb 04
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