9.2
Copyright and Student Work
Did
you know?
•
Copyright in the United States was established in the Constitution.
• You can violate copyright even if you don't sell the copies
you have made.
• Your own work is protected by copyright even if you don't
give copyright notification and don't register your work with
the Library of Congress.
Copyright law in the United States is designed
to play two public interests against each other to promote the development
of knowledge and culture.
1.
The law protects the right of an author or creator to profit and
benefit from original work, providing an incentive to do that
work. Among scholars this benefit comes from receiving credit
for one's work and thus building a reputation.
2. The law provides reasonable access to the work, so that others
can build on that work and further advance knowledge. This access
comes through particular limitations on copyright, including fair
use, which allows the quotation of small bits of a work for purposes
of criticism and scholarship.
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