1. What Is Copyright? Carteret Community College Library Content by Elizabeth Baker
2. What Is Copyright? Elizabeth Baker, 2009 A form of legal protection for creative works. Granted to authors or creators. Extends to both published and unpublished works.
3. Why Is Copyright Important? Elizabeth Baker, 2009 Because it is the law. The copyright statute is found in Article 1, Section 8 of the United States Constitution: “Congress shall have the power ‘To promote the progress of science and useful arts, by securing for limited times to authors and inventors the exclusive right to their respective writings and discoveries.’’ http://www.lib.ncsu.edu/scc/tutorial/basics.html
20. How Does Copyright Affect the Internet? Appliesjust like any other format. As soon as a web page is created, the author or publisher holds the copyright. No notice is required on the web page for the content to be protected. You will need to seek permission from the copyright holder to use copyrighted material (a photograph, article, company logo, etc.). You can include a link on your web site to another web page without violating copyright.
21. How Does Copyright Affect the Classroom? There are some exceptions for classroom use. These exceptions apply to face-to-face instruction. They allow non-profit, academic institutions to follow Fair Use guidelines. These guidelines allow only 10% or less of an entire work to be used.
22. How Does All This Affect Me? Any facts, quotes, pictures, diagrams, charts, etc. included in your paper or project that are not your original ideas, thoughts, observations, art work, or photographs, or that is not common knowledge, must be properly cited.
23. How Does All This Affect Me? If you do not list your sources, you could be found guilty of plagiarism. In addition, you could be guilty of copyright infringement for using someone else’s work or creativity without proper permission or authority.
24. Elizabeth Baker, 2009 What is Copyright Infringement? The use of lawfully protected material in an unauthorizedmanner. Copyright infringement includes: piracy, sharing, downloading, copying, etc. If a court finds you guilty of copyright infringement, you will be ordered to pay damages to the copyright holder.