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  • In the U.S., content including books, journal articles, photos, audio and video are intellectual property and therefore can be protected by copyright restrictions.
  • This document attempts to orient you about:
    • The right of "fair use" designed for non-profit research, teaching, and scholarship
    • Materials in the "public domain"
    • How to use Mandala in light of Copyrightcopyright law
  • It does not provide legal advice (please see disclaimer below)

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  • U.S. copyright law provides for "fair use" of copyrighted materials without payment or permission in certain circumstances, which are often associated with non-profit research, teaching, and scholarship.
    • Generally this means that you can reproduce portions of a work without securing copyright permission from the publisher and/or author.
  • Recent case law has held that fair use will be judged in light of purpose.  
    • For sufficiently new or transformative purposes, quite a lot of a copyrighted work can be used.
    • Old guidelines that emphasized counting words or calculated pre-determined percentages of a given work are no longer useful.

Older "Public Domain" Materials

  • Generally, work published prior to 1923 is in the "public domain" and can be reproduced and disseminated in any form.
  • A thorough summary hosted by the University of North Carolina can help you assess whether a given work is in the Public Domain: http://www.unc.edu/~unclng/public-d.htm

Copyright Request and Release Form

These The following templates could may be useful if you need to seek copyright permission or if your project requires a release form.

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  • Supports your work within Copyright Law copyright law and "Fair Usefair use"
  • Allows you as editorial user to restrict each asset or collection as needed.  You may choose among the following restriction classifications:
    • Public
    • Private
    • Group 
    • Class

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