This link has been bookmarked by 22 people . It was first bookmarked on 03 Apr 2008, by Michael Richards.
-
04 Apr 12
-
29 Mar 12
-
28 Mar 12
-
27 Mar 12
-
26 Feb 12
-
When it comes to “fair use” under U.S. copyright law, teachers do NOT have an “anything goes” sort of blanket permission. Many teachers have this misperception.
-
playing songs at assemblies, those are likely considered “public venues” rather than instructional settings. Practically speaking, I think copyrighted songs and clips of copyrighted songs are played at sporting events constantly without the explicit permission of the copyright owners. Does such use of the media constitute “fair use?” If the sporting event is charging an admission fee for tickets, that is less clear. I have not heard of K-12 schools being sued (much less sued successfully) for playing copyrighted songs during a school assembly. That does not mean a school out there hasn’t been sued for this, or that some music company isn’t going to file suit against a school tomorrow for this.
-
-
28 Jan 11
-
22 Oct 10
-
27 Apr 10
-
19 Feb 10
-
07 Feb 10
-
13 Jan 10
Helen MowersCopyright questions and answers about iTunes, Podcasts, and Fair Use
-
01 Dec 09
-
26 Jul 08
-
20 May 08
-
03 Apr 08
-
07 Mar 08
Would you like to comment?
Join Diigo for a free account, or sign in if you are already a member.