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    1. A sequel on Salinger - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      It has been expanded so greatly that it now conflicts with transformative fair uses and even works like “Sixty Years Later” that, in my (...)

    2. Copyright FAQ for government works. - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      Post navigation Previous Post E-textbooks: the state of play Next Post Copyright use case on a Grecian Urn Discussions about the (...)

    3. Project Planning: Transitions – Duke ScholarWorks

      Emphasis is on how libraries in particular play a role in guiding and supporting digital publications.

    4. Scholarly Communications @ Duke - Page 37 of 58 - Discussions about the changing world of scholarly

      There has been some discussion, for example, about whether or not there needs to be an equal number of check boxes on each side (favoring (...)

    5. Fixing the DMCA? - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      October 15, 2007 Kevin Smith, J.D. 2 Comments The Digital Millennium Copyright Act added two important sections to the copyright act, one that (...)

    6. From foreign courts, - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      The law in the US is entirely the other way on this point – parody is a well-established purpose that is favored in the fair use (...)

    7. Copyright Concerns of Graduate Researchers – Duke ScholarWorks

      Use of works protected by copyright in your dissertation or thesis will need either permission or a fair use justification. (...)

    8. Fashioning innovation - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      Blakely discusses, in a smart and engaging way, the role that intellectual property protections play in providing incentives for (...)

    9. Literary borrowing - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      What was formerly a ponderous history revives in the shape of a romance—an old legend changes into a modern play—and a sober (...)

    10. Scholarly Communications @ Duke - Page 31 of 58 - Discussions about the changing world of scholarly

      These rules do not change the definition of fair use; they merely specify a small group of purposes within the broader category of (...)

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