Recently Asked Questions
Displaying 31 - 35 of 42
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Re-printing instructional materials for classroom use
A teacher would like to reprint a student workbook we can no longer find in print. We tried to get permission from the company that bought the publisher out, but they said they couldn’t help. At this point, can we prove that we have made a good faith effort to receive permission? |
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Digitizing and hosting audio recordings containing copyright-protected material
When digitizing radio broadcasts of cultural significance (such as a talk show confronting social issues), must a library, museum, or archive remove any separately copyrighted songs before posting the recordings? This question assumes that the library, museum, or archive owns or has a license to use the overall recording of the broadcast. |
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Sharing supplemental textbook resources
Can a faculty member, who no longer requires students to buy a textbook, duplicate and share (with the students) the supplemental instructional resources provided by the publisher? The resources can be both digital and hard copy. |
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Skating the Line between Helpful Information and Legal Advice
This answer was inspired by some recent questions… In the quest to give excellent service and maximum access, librarians must apply intellectual property guidelines--a skill the average person has not honed. Library users, observing this skill (or having been alerted to a copyright concern by a librarian), may then ask for legal advice. Here’s an example: |
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Cookbook Recipes as Textbooks
An instructor has loaded many scanned pages from a cookbook (possibly multiple cookbooks) into her class Blackboard page so that students do not have to purchase a textbook. In the samples I've received, I don't see any acknowledgements of the original author(s). Is this permissible? Thank you! |
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