Subject: RE: fair use of psychological scales From: "Charles P. Wiggins" <cpwiggins@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Date: Fri, 02 Sep 2011 09:06:28 -0400 |
"Yes, but do you think any court now would not likely take the same approach toward consumables?" I would think so. I think consumables like forms and worksheets would easily fail the fourth Fair Use test in such a spectacular manner that it would be a forgone conclusion that it is an infringement, especially when it is clearly forbidden by the "Guidelines" agreement Kevin Smith cited. The only exception I can clearly see would be if the consumables are no longer available for purchase. Mr. Smith does raise one other important point. If the nature of the content does not include any unique intellectual property, then only the expression of the consumable would be protected and there would be nothing to prevent an institution from producing a similar form or worksheet in a different expression. Good examples of that would be a job application or a math worksheet. Generally, these kinds of forms contain information that would be considered factual data and common knowledge and therefore not subject to copyright protection. My 2 cents, Charles Charles P. Wiggins Director of Library Services Isothermal Community College P.O. Box 804 Spindale, NC 28160 828-286-3636 ext. 216 cpwiggins@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx E-mail correspondence to and from this sender may be subject to the North Carolina Public Records law and may be disclosed to third parties. >>> Sandy Thatcher <sandy.thatcher@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> 9/1/2011 2:53 PM >>> Yes, but do you think any court now would not likely take the same approach toward consumables? Sandy Thatcher At 12:14 PM -0400 9/1/11, Peter B. Hirtle wrote: >Kevin is right: the prohibition on the reproduction of consumables is in the >"Guidelines for Classroom Copying in Not-For-Profit Educational Institutions," >which some educational organizations rejected when they were proposed and >which have not been upheld by the courts. > >Peter Hirtle > >-----Original Message----- >From: Kevin Smith [mailto:kevin.l.smith@xxxxxxxx] >Sent: Wednesday, August 31, 2011 1:25 PM >To: Cary Jardine; digital-copyright@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx >Subject: RE: fair use of psychological scales > >I don't think there is any rule in the Title 17 about "consumables" being >treated differently. Certainly, one could still do a fair use analysis on >this material. The fact that it is a consumable (if it is) might have an >impact on the fourth factor, but the law does not specifically foreclose the >possibility of fair use. > >Before looking at fair use, however, two other questions should be >considered. >First, was the instrument obtained subject to a licensing agreement? If it >was, the terms of the agreement, not the copyright law, will control. Second, >is the instrument likely to be subject to copyright at all? Someone already >mentioned Baker v. Sheldon, and the point is well-taken. If the scale lacks >originality, it may not be necessary to get to the fair use analysis. > >Kevin L. Smith, M.L.S., J.D. >Director of Scholarly Communications >Duke University, Perkins Library >P.O. Box 90193 >Durham, NC 27708 >919-668-4451 >kevin.l.smith@xxxxxxxx > > >-----Original Message----- >From: Cary Jardine [mailto:cjardine@xxxxxxxxxxx] >Sent: Wednesday, August 31, 2011 1:10 PM >To: digital-copyright@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx >Subject: Fwd: fair use of psychological scales > >Sorry, I think this didn't go to the list the first time! > >---------- Forwarded message ---------- >From: Cary Jardine <cjardine@xxxxxxxxxxx> >Date: Wed, Aug 31, 2011 at 1:08 PM >Subject: Re: fair use of psychological scales >To: Jeffrey Galin <JGALIN@xxxxxxx> > > >That would be my understanding as well -- that 'consumables' cannot be >reproduced. And assessments such as these, as far as I know, are not allowed >to be used or even made available to students for study without payment, and >there are usually restrictions about who may purchase them (licensed >professionals, etc). Also, I'm not aware of any specific exemptions for >"non-funded research." > >Cary Jardine, MLS >Antioch University New England Library >Keene, NH 03431 >603.283.2405 >cjardine@xxxxxxxxxxx > >On Wed, Aug 31, 2011 at 11:31 AM, Jeffrey Galin <JGALIN@xxxxxxx> wrote: > >> Reilly, >> It is my understanding that scales and scoring sheets are copyrighted >> consumables which means you must pay for them. While there are common >> practices in many fields to reproduce forms on copy machines, these >> reproductions without permissions or licenses are violations of copyright. >> Cheers, >> jrg >> >> -----Original Message----- >> From: Reilly, Michele [mailto:mreilly@xxxxxx] >> Sent: Wednesday, August 31, 2011 11:11 AM >> To: 'digital-copyright@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx' >> Subject: fair use of psychological scales >> >> Hi All, >> >> I have a researcher with a question about Fair Use. >> >> "I am planning a study with a friend and it was my understanding that >> even scales that are copyright are fair use when using them for >> non-funded research. My friend has previously payed in order to use >> the scales. I was wondering which of us is correct. To put the study >> we are planning into more perspective, we want to use the Beck >> Depression Inventory and the Beck Anxiety Inventory in order to >> validate a measure of nightmares we are attempting to validate. Any >> information you could provide about this topic would be much >> appreciated." >> >> Any help would be greatly appreciated. > > >> Thanks, >> Michele >> >> Michele Reilly >> Head of Digital Services >> University of Houston Libraries >> 114 University Libraries >> Houston, TX 77204-2000 >> Phone: 713-743-8995 >> mreilly@xxxxxx >> [cid:image001.png@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] >> >> [***** removed an attachment of type image/png which had a name of >> image001.png] -- Sanford G. Thatcher 8201 Edgewater Drive Frisco, TX 75034-5514 e-mail: sandy.thatcher@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Phone: (214) 705-1939 Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/sanford.thatcher "If a book is worth reading, it is worth buying."-John Ruskin (1865) "The reason why so few good books are written is that so few people who can write know anything."-Walter Bagehot (1853)
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