Website Search Results

    Page 3 of 133 website results

    1. Scholarly Communications @ Duke - Page 11 of 58 - Discussions about the changing world of scholarly

      They do not contemplate a situation where the actual ownership of the rights might be disputable.  

    2. Scholarly Communications @ Duke - Page 58 of 58 - Discussions about the changing world of scholarly

      For help deciding if either of these exceptions to the anti-circumvention rules applies to your situation, please contact the Scholarly (...)

    3. Ignore fair use at your peril! - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      Pingback: Roundup and Analysis re: Fair Use Ruling by 9th Circuit Court of Appeals (Lenz vs.

    4. Copyright roundup - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      They do not contemplate a situation where the actual ownership of the rights might be disputable.  

    5. Google Books, Fair Use, and the Public Good - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      Thus we have a coherent analysis that recognizes the public purpose of copyright and still respects it chosen method for accomplishing (...)

    6. Learning from ambiguity - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      In general this decision is a very comprehensive and cogent fair use analysis that deserves to be widely read.  So why am I still (...)

    7. Law and politics in the GSU case - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      When the Supreme Court re-calibrated the fair use analysis to focus on transformativeness in Campbell v.

    8. Public art and fair use - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      Reading these case decisions continues to give us additional data points to guide our analysis, but we never arrive at a finished picture.

    9. So what about self-archiving? - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      There was an excellent article written in 2012 by law professor Eric Priest about this situation, and his conclusion is “that (...)

    10. Two cases that could shape copyright - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      Efroni suggests that we think of free use in Germany as “an extreme version of the transformativeness element familiar from the U.S. fair use (...)

    More Search Options