Fair Use
Important: This article contains opinions and information about
copyright law. Keep in mind that I am not a lawyer and have not
been a lawyer in any past life that I am aware of. If you have
specific questions about copyright law you should contact the
appropriate legal resources.
Think about it for a minute. If no on could ever make a copy of
anything without the copyright owner's permission, then
commentary, critical articles, news reporting, research papers
and education would be much more difficult. It would be much
more difficult, for example, to write a book report without
including a quote or two from the author. It would be even more
difficult to write a thesis, term paper or research article
without including quotes from dozens or even hundreds of sources.
Let's say you were writing an article on copyright and you
needed to illustrate a point. You could write your own words
(and you should), but you would have a much more powerful
article if you included some quotes from reputable sources. It
makes it appear that you have done your research and gives you
additional authority that you might not otherwise be granted.
In fact, it would be downright silly to require people to get
permission to make quotes of this nature. Imagine how difficult
it would be if you were writing a term paper which included
references from a hundred difficult sources. You would have to
track down each author and ask permission. Many times the author
has given up the copyright to some other entity, so you would
have to do further research on who really owns the copyrights.
This could conceivably require more time than writing the paper
itself!
To enable you to include quotes of other author's works, an
exemption to the United States copyright law was created. This
allows for "commentary, parody, news reporting, research and
education about copyrighted works without the permission of the
author (from "10 Big Myths about copyright explained", just to
illustrate how this works).
So how does this work? Well, some of the more important
considerations are:
- Your intent in copying the work - How much of the work was
copied - As well as any damage to the commercial value of the
work.
So, for example, if you were writing an article about the
quality of the movie "The Mummy Returns", you could use brief
quotes from the film to illustrate your point. However, if you
included the entire script on your web site, well, that would be
a copyright violation.
In general, it is a good idea to include a reference to the
original source material. This serves many purposes, one of the
most important being simple common courtesy (in fact, I often
like to let the author know I have borrowed some of his words).
It also makes it clear that you have invoked fair use, and it
gives your readers a source for additional information. Just as
important, you improve your own credibility by showing you have
done your research and you are not afraid to allow others to see
how you came to your conclusions.
To further illustrate, the following would most likely be
covered under fair use:
- Including brief quotes from published papers for your research
papers.
- Writing an article on your web site about the Simpsons and
including a WAV file quoting Homer. Perhaps something like
"Homer's 'Doh' has become famous the world over", with a
hyperlink to a WAV file for the "Doh".
- Criticizing a book and including a few quotes to illustrate
your point.
- Criticizing a book and including quotes from other critics to
reinforce your point.
The following would most likely be considered copyright
violations:
- Including, without permission, several pages of material from
another research paper.
- Wholesale copying of pages from a website to your own website.
- Scanning photographs of Heather Locklear from Cosmopolitan for
your fan site.
- Including dozens of sound clips from the Simpsons series on
your web site. It is still a copyright violation regardless of
whether you "borrowed" them from the official Simpsons site or
you recorded them from your own VCR.
- You are annoyed because your favorite encyclopedia site now
charges a monthly fee instead of being ad supported. You include
several articles directly on your own site so people will not
have to pay the fee to see the articles.
These would not only violate copyright law, but they would also
violate bandwidth stealing rules.
- Linking directly to a photo of Heather Locklear on the
Cosmopolitan site. You could do this legally by (a) asking and
receiving permission, or (b) creating a link to the HTML
document on the Cosmopolitan site which contains the picture.
- Linking directly to sound files from the official Simpsons
site. You could legally, however, link to the HTML pages on the
Simpsons site which contain the WAV files.
- Linking directly to video clips from the official Star Trek
site. Again, you could link to the pages containing the video
clips.
IMPORTANT NOTE ABOUT LINKING Linking to pages within a web site
besides the entrance page is still being tested in court. To
date it is considered acceptable practice - however, the results
of several recent court cases seem to indicate this is changing
to "it's okay unless specifically excluded by the web site". My
personal opinion is to link to HTML pages to your hearts
content, but to never link directly to graphics, sound files,
videos and other media.
One of the critical issues with fair use is the definition
itself. Many years ago a supreme court justice defined
pornography simply as "I know it when I see it", and fair use is
governed by a similar concept.
Another important consideration about fair use is the copyright
owner does not need to be and should not be asked for
permission. Why? Because fair use is one of the most important
pieces of the copyright law puzzle. It allows students to write
papers, critics to criticize, authors to quote and researchers
to research. By asking permission you are not invoking fair use
and in fact you are, in a small way, weakening the law. You do
have the right to make fair use of any work that exists (well,
with the exception of classified government documents and things
covered under trade secrets laws and non-disclosure agreements).
If you are an author you have a right to your copyrights, and
you also have a right to use other's works fairly. Laws are
funny things, they are just words unless they are actively and
constantly used, tested and upheld. Rights are even more
important - if you don't use them you lose them.
Of course (and this does not violate my point above about not
asking), you always have the option of writing to the copyright
owner and directly asking for permission to use their works. You
should do this if, in your own mind, you get some doubt about if
you are using the works fairly. More simply, when you find
yourself doing more than including a few brief phrases, lines or
a paragraph, then by all means ask.
The standard I like to use is simple. If I am using other's
words to help illustrate or reinforce a point that I am making,
then it's fair use. If, on the other hand, I am using other's
words to make the point itself, well, then perhaps I need to ask
permission. Illustration or reinforcement does not generally
require many words - making a point often does.