>>Copyright >> Fair Use
Introduction to Fair Use
What are the Goals of this Introduction
The goals of this page are:
- to present material and resources on Fair Use, so as to
educate those new to the concept and to remind others of its
history and basic rules;
- to assemble the texts of the
proposed
guidelines for fair use of digital materials, to be presented
before the assembled Conference on Fair Use May 19, 1997,
alongside endorsements and commentaries by those in the field as
to the benefits and problems of these guidelines, thus providing a
forum for community members to share each other's thoughts on
CONFU and the proposed guidelines;
- to offer support to, and a gathering repository of resource
materials for, a series of
Town Meetings held
across the country from February 1997 to February 1998, designed
to educate consituencies about the changes to fair use proposed in
these guidelines and to elicit community response.
What is Copyright?
The function of copyright, as its name implies, is that it
guarantees for the creator of a work the rights to copy, reproduce
and distribute it. In the U.S., this guarantee is rooted in the
Constitution. However, from its legal origins (in England in 1710 and
in the U.S. in 1790) copyright was as much about the promotion and
circulation of knowledge and good ideas as it was about the
protection and rewarding of creators. Limitations and exemptions to
creators' copyright protection were as important to society as the
protection itself.
Copyright protection applies not to facts nor to ideas but to the
particular expression of ideas in a tangible medium. The duration of
copyright protection is for the lifetime of a creator plus 50 years
(although legislation is before Congress to extend that protection
for a further 20 years). Creators have the exclusive rights to
reproduce their work, to prepare derivative works, to distribute
copies, and to perform and display their work publicly. Creators can
and usually do assign their rights to others for commercial
exploitation of their creations.
The rights of copyright holders are spelled out in
Section
106 of Copyright Law (Section 106 of Chapter 1 of Title 17 of the
U.S. Code, to be precise).
What is Fair Use?
There are certain specified limitations to the rights of copyright
holders, each of which are addressed by different sections of
copyright law. These include: Fair Use
(Section
107); reproduction by libraries and archives
(Section
108); and "First Sale," or the transfer of a legally acquired
copy of a work
(Section
109). For certain uses, users do not have to seek permission from
copyright owners to use material.
Fair Use of copyright material is allowed for purposes such as
criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, or
research.
To judge whether a use of copyright material is fair use or not,
the law provides for a four factor test.
What are the Four Factors?
The Four Factors laid down by Section 107 of copyright law are
those to be used to determine whether a use of copyright material in
a particular case is a "fair use" or not.
- the purpose and character of the use, including whether such
use is of a commercial nature or is for nonprofit educational
purposes;
- the nature of the copyrighted work;
- the amount and substantiality of the portion used in relation
to the copyrighted work as a whole; and
- the effect of the use upon the potential market for or value
of the copyrighted work. The fact that a work is unpublished shall
not itself bar a finding of fair use if such finding is made upon
consideration of all the above factors.
Only the courts can determine whether a particular use is a fair
use or not.
Douglas Bennett, in a section of the essay, "Fair Use in Digital
Environments," reproduced on this page, speaks about the
1976 effort to produce guidelines
for the fair use of material.
What are some Landmark Fair Use Court Cases?
The following are some of the most important recent court cases
that have helped define fair use. The links here are to case law and
judicial opinions assembled by the Stanford University
Copyright and Fair Use Web
site.
The source of the summary notes here is the highly recommended
Timeline: A
History of Copyright in the U.S., produced by the Association of
Research Libraries.
- PRINCETON
UNIVERSITY PRESS v. MICHIGAN DOCUMENT SERVICES, INC. 1996
"In February 1996, the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that
an off-campus, for-profit photocopy shop may, as a matter of fair
use, make coursepacks that include substantial portions of
copyright protected books and sell them to students. On April 9,
1996 the judges of the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals voted to
rehear this case en banc. The effect of that vote is to vacate the
previous decision from the Sixth Circuit, leaving in force a
previous injunction issued by the District Court. The case was
reheard June 12, 1996.
In May 1996, an amicus brief was filed in the case on behalf of
the educational community by the Attorney General of the State of
Georgia, the National School Board Association, the Georgia and
California School Boards Associations, and the American
Association of School Administrators. ARL filed a letter with the
U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit to express its strong
support for the important basic principles expressed in the brief
of these amici. The American Library Association joined ARL in
filing this letter. The ARL-ALA letter calls on the court to take
note of the broader issues raised in the case and the significant
public interests affected. "If the public did not have the ability
to exercise . . . fair use rights," the letter states, "education,
scholarly research and the progress of science and the arts would
be severely inhibited, and the usefulness - and inevitably the
value - of the copyrighted works concerned would be substantially
diminished."
- AMERICAN
GEOPHYSICAL UNION v. TEXACO INC. 1995
" In July 1992, a U.S. District judge ruled in the seven-year old
copyright case that a Texaco scientist violated the U.S. Copyright
Law (Section 107) when he copied articles without providing the
appropriate fee to the publishers. Texaco argued that the copying
fell within fair use. The court ruled that the profit motive of
the company was a relevant consideration in the analysis of the
purpose of the use. They also found against Texaco in considering
the amount of the work used focusing on the article as the "whole
work" rather than the journal it came from. They also found that
the market was affected because Texaco could have paid royalties
through the Copyright
Clearance Center.
"In 1994, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit
upheld the lower court decision. In April 1995, Texaco petitioned
the U.S. Supreme Court to review the case. On May 15, 1995, Texaco
and a steering committee representing the publishers announced
that they have agreed upon terms to settle the case. Texaco, will
pay a seven-figure settlement and retroactive licensing fee to the
CCC. In addition, Texaco will enter into standard annual license
agreements with the CCC."
- BASIC
BOOKS V. KINKO'S GRAPHICS CORPORATION, 1991
"A Federal District Court in New York ruled that Kinko's Graphic
Corporation infringed copyrights, and did not exercise fair use,
when it photocopied "coursepacks" that included book chapters, and
then sold them to students for classwork. The court found that
most of the fair use factors worked against Kinko's in this case,
especially given Kinko's profit motive in making the copies.
Additionally, the court found that the classroom guidelines did
not apply to Kinko's. The court did not rule that coursepacks
cannot constitute fair use in other circumstances. "
Why is Fair Use suddenly so important on the Internet?
With the rapid growth of on-line traffic, and the ability of
on-line users to copy, change and re-distribute material very easily,
many creators and owners have withheld their work from the Internet
for fear of its being pirated and abused. The fear of piracy and
misappropriation of work was a very strong impetus behind the 1995
proposed revision of the copyright law, known as the
National
Information Infrastructure Copyright Protection Act.
This bill proposed adding a new "transmission right" for owners,
but appeared relatively unconcerned about fair use and other rights
limitations. For discussion of this bill, see material on the home page of the
Digital Future Coalition.
This bill was not passed by the 104th Congress. Whether it will be
re-introduced, and in what form, in the 105th Congress is still to be
determined.
What is the Conference on Fair Use?
See the section of Douglas Bennett's essay, "Fair Use in Digital
Environments," that explains CONFU
(the Conference on Fair Use).
Also see "A
Review of the Conference on Fair Use and Proposed Guidelines," a
personal account by Virginia M.G. Hall and Kathe Albrecht, for the
members of the Visual Resources Association, published in February
1997.
And see the section,
"The
CONFU Process" from the December 1996
"Interim
Report" on the Conference on Fair Use by Peter Fowler.
What is the Relationship between Fair Use Guidelines and
Legislation?
While any endorsed and formally accepted CONFU Guidelines have no
force of law, they, in the form of a CONFU Final Report, will be
submitted as part of legislative history and thus can be referenced
in connection with the Copyright Act provisions on fair use. However,
determination of whether a use is "fair use" or not will be
determined by the courts, based on the Four-Factor analysis.
Guidelines would not have the force of law in any legal
determination.
What Happens Next?
After the Conference on Fair Use meets May 19, 1997 to consider
the endorsements or rejections of the three sets of proposed
guidelines, the community will have in its possession a body of
material representing a measure of agreement and disagreement about
the practice of the educational fair use of digital materials. Court
cases and the passage of time with new technical and social
developments will add to the understanding that practitioners will
have as to what does and does not constitute fair use when applied to
digital materials.
Included in the "Interim Report" was a
recommendation
that "the Working Group on Intellectual Property Rights of the
Information Infrastructure Task Force, or another appropriate federal
government body, should consider convening another conference on fair
use within five years to address both those areas of concern where
participants did not, or were unable to, reach agreement on fair use
guidelines and any other concerns regarding fair use at that time."
Many, however, feel that should another body be convened it should
have the weight of Congressional authority.
|