Copyright
STOP! Before reading further take the
CopyRight Quiz
from Sacramento State.
Here is a summary of the main accepted points."Is all the material I did not produce
myself illegal in my online course?" Well, actually anything that has been saved (to
disk, to recorder, to print - including wikis, blogs, navigation buttons) is protected
by copyright laws - material does not need a registered copyright. Even sites that
require a login with password (as with our Bb courses) need to follow copyright laws.
And this copyright policy is worldwide. If you do not have permissions, you need to
know the guidelines. But then, this issue is complex, changing, and a bit vague with
no absolutely clear answers. And, the good news is that there have been some recent
decisions that give educators a bit more license and freedom. You might want to view
the "Copyright Primer."'
Here is a summary of the main accepted points.
Public Domain:
If something was published before 1923, it is generally free to use. Here is an example:
Darwin's Origin of Species. Beyond this rule, it gets complex.
This policy is designed to allow such activities as teaching, reporting news, critiquing, and researching a bit more flexibility and leeway. Material still must be acquired legally - not "off the air" or include material with "exclusionary licensing." And, the material must used on a secure network - not for the world to download.
There are four main criteria for legal use by faculty or students (Fair Use Guidelines for Educational Multimedia):
The
TEACH Act
expanded these right somewhat for educators.
So what does all this practically mean for online teachers (and students):
To Copy or Not to Copy
What if you want more than this? Here are some options:
publisher content
(which can include videos, textbook art, InfoTrac, etc.) - a fee is usually charged to students
You have created an online course? Do you own it or does the college own it ("intellectual property rights")? Can you teach your course at other institutions (non-exclusive clause)? Usually, the college owns the course, but districts have different policies and "the course" can be different than "course content." Ask Zoe or an administrator for a clearer answer to your specific situation (see sidebar interview). You can always protect your own work from being copied by others by using PDF (Acrobat security options) and most streaming video is protected from download. Regarding using your Bb course at other colleges, this question is moot as each course must be recreated at each college (in Bb which is copyrighted) and then your own (protected?) materials are added to these Bb templates.