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    1. Are we done with copyright? - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      Elkin-Koren suggests a possibility: [A] legal right to control copies may no longer be useful in a digital environment. 

    2. Fair use for appropriation art - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      In Thursday’s decision, the Appeals Court told us, and Judge Batts, that this was not the right standard for assessing transformation (...)

    3. Why is adopting orphans controversial? - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      I don’t even have a scanner or a cameraphone, and I’d still defend to the death the fair use right of any bookowner to make copies of (...)

    4. How to Restrict Access to the Law (and Make Money Doing It!) - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      We cannot see how this aspect of copyright protection can be squared with the right of the public to know the law to which it is subject.”

    5. Reform is in the air - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      The addition of a private copying right, which would decriminalize ripping a CD to listen on an iPod or scanning a journal article to (...)

    6. Getting first sale wrong - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      Such students would no longer have the right to re-sell their textbooks or to purchase used texts. 

    7. Salvos in the Copyright Wars - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      It’s going to be up to the judge to make the right decision here, I hope that is what happens. aisha says: September 4, 2007 at 10:59 (...)

    8. A copyright use case on film screenings - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      The starting point is that a copyright owner has the exclusive right to authorize public performances of their works.

    9. Time for Taxes? Not Just Yet...

      Earlier this month, Consumer Reports provided some helpful tips to help evaluate which option is right for you . If your taxes turn out (...)

    10. Holiday Notes from the Homefront and Abroad - Bitstreams: The Digital Collections Blog

      Sanford would write home that “things are going well in this country,” and they had “[m]ore food than elsewhere,” without explaining (...)

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