Re: [meteorite-list] copyright questions - newspaper articles correspondence

2011-05-04 Thread The Tricottet Collection

Thank you all for these very useful information. I will investigate more and 
let you know.

Best regards,

Arnaud

The Tricottet Collection
(Historic Minerals, Fossils  Meteorites)
http://www.thetricottetcollection.com/
http://www.facebook.com/TheTricottetCollection
http://twitter.com/TricottetColl#







 Date: Tue, 3 May 2011 21:37:49 -0500
 From: mmar...@meteoritetreasures.com
 To: meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
 Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] copyright questions - newspaper articles  
 correspondence

 Hi Arnaud,

 I've got some experience with US copyright law and will outline it the
 best I can:

 1. Works published before 1978 remain protected under copyright law
 for 75 years from the date of their original publication. Works
 published on or after January 1, 1978 as protected by copyright laws
 until 50 years after the death of the author.

 2. As for the newspaper no longer existing, I believe the above rule
 applies. If the newspaper company owned the copyright (i.e. the
 article was written by a staff member) then the copyright will expire
 based on it's publication date as described above. If it was reader
 contributed or written by a person who was not employed by the
 newspaper, then the author owns the copyright, and not the newspaper
 and the date of death would apply.

 3. Your intended use for educational, non-commercial value would most
 likely be viewed as fair use based on the mission of your
 organization, however given the very public nature of the web and your
 desire to be as clean as possible legally, I would suggest that you
 spend a little money for advice from an attorney who specializes in
 copyright law. A few hundred dollars now could be well worth the
 savings if a disgruntled person saw their information published on a
 public website without their permission.

 4. I am not familiar with copyrights laws and how they apply to
 personal correspondence. Surely documents that you have written are
 yours freely to use, however the ones written by others may be a
 different story. I'm not going to say any more on this because I
 simply don't know.

 There are lots of restrictions of fair use too...so be mindful that
 just because a person intends to use a published work for educational
 purposes that you can use another person's work in its entirety.
 Restrictions are in place that limit how much of a work can be used,
 even for educational purposes. There are also time limits in some
 instances, in instances known as 'spontaneous' copies. An example of
 this would be if a story was just published and waiting to obtain
 copyright permission for educational use would cause the loss of
 educational value, then fair use comes into play. Even then there are
 still restrictions on the amount of the source that may be copied and
 the amount of images that may be copies as well. In my opinion, it's
 worth getting an informed decision by someone qualified.

 Mind you, I am not an attorney, but simply a teacher who has done
 research on this in the past.

 Aloha,


 Matthew Martin
 Meteorite Treasures
 P.O. Box 164, Kaaawa, HI 96730
 www.meteoritetreasures.com






 On Tue, May 3, 2011 at 10:18 AM, The Tricottet Collection
  wrote:


 Dear list members,

 I'd like to give access on my website to transcripts of my
 newspaper articles and original correspondence related to meteorites
 (and minerals  fossils...):

 http://www.thetricottetcollection.com/library_met_newspapers.html
 http://www.thetricottetcollection.com/library_met_manuscripts.html

 However I haven't done it until now because I don't know the laws
 regarding copyrights.

 Would someone know if diffusing a transcript instead of a scan is legal?
 Should articles be more than 30 years old for instance?
 If the newspaper does not exist anymore, is there still a copyright?
 What is the situation for correspondence letters that I own, from
 living or deceased individuals?

 I'm especially looking for information related to US law, but
 also to the Italian one. I'd like to give access to a high resolution
 digital copy of the famous Walter Molino drawing of Holbrook in the
 1946 newspaper La Domenica del Corriere, based on a copy I own.


 Thank you for your help,

 Arnaud


 The Tricottet Collection
 (Historic Minerals, Fossils  Meteorites)
 http://www.thetricottetcollection.com/
 http://www.facebook.com/TheTricottetCollection
 http://twitter.com/TricottetColl#




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[meteorite-list] copyright questions - newspaper articles correspondence

2011-05-04 Thread Paul H.
Arnaud asked

“I'd like to give access on my website to transcripts 
of my newspaper articles and original correspondence 
related to meteorites (and minerals  fossils...):

http://www.thetricottetcollection.com/library_met_newspapers.html
http://www.thetricottetcollection.com/library_met_manuscripts.html

However I haven't done it until now because I don't 
know the laws regarding copyrights.”

Wikipedia, for obvious reasons, has an extensive and
useful discussion of copyright laws. they include,

“Copyright” at:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copyright#Copyright_by_country

“List of countries' copyright length”
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries%27_copyright_length

“Fair use”
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fair_use

“Public Domain”
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Public_domain

Despite the known cavets and limitations about Wikipedia, 
I have found these pages useful as a starting point in 
finding information about the various aspects of copyright.

Yours,

Paul H.
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[meteorite-list] copyright questions - newspaper articles correspondence

2011-05-03 Thread The Tricottet Collection

Dear list members,

I'd like to give access on my website to transcripts of my newspaper articles 
and original correspondence related to meteorites (and minerals  fossils...):

http://www.thetricottetcollection.com/library_met_newspapers.html
http://www.thetricottetcollection.com/library_met_manuscripts.html

However I haven't done it until now because I don't know the laws regarding 
copyrights.

Would someone know if diffusing a transcript instead of a scan is legal?
Should articles be more than 30 years old for instance?
If the newspaper does not exist anymore, is there still a copyright?
What is the situation for correspondence letters that I own, from living or 
deceased individuals?

I'm especially looking for information related to US law, but also to the 
Italian one. I'd like to give access to a high resolution digital copy of the 
famous Walter Molino drawing of Holbrook in the 1946 newspaper La Domenica del 
Corriere, based on a copy I own.


Thank you for your help,

Arnaud


The Tricottet Collection
(Historic Minerals, Fossils  Meteorites)
http://www.thetricottetcollection.com/
http://www.facebook.com/TheTricottetCollection
http://twitter.com/TricottetColl#


  
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Re: [meteorite-list] copyright questions - newspaper articles correspondence

2011-05-03 Thread Don Merchant
Hi Arnaud. I do not believe you would be breaking any laws here in the U.S. 
In other countries I am not sure, but I believe there may be some sort of 
universal copyright laws that most countries follow. I do know that as long 
as you are not selling the transcripts ect for profit and you give credit to 
the author and using it in a educational purpose way then this is called by 
Law... Fair Use. It is a law that allows anyone to use information, 
pictures, music, without the need to contact the author for permission of 
use. That of course means for its use MUST be  non profit, educational 
purposes and credit to the author. In your case Arnaud, it seems what you 
want to do is very legal.
Here is a link about Fair Use law and at least here in the U.S you would be 
fine.

Sincerely
Don Merchant
Founder-Cosmic Treasures Celestial Wonders
http://www.ctreasurescwonders.com/index.html
IMCA #0960
- Original Message - 
From: The Tricottet Collection tricottetc...@live.com

To: MeteoriteList meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
Sent: Tuesday, May 03, 2011 3:18 PM
Subject: [meteorite-list] copyright questions - newspaper articles 
correspondence





Dear list members,

I'd like to give access on my website to transcripts of my newspaper 
articles and original correspondence related to meteorites (and minerals  
fossils...):


http://www.thetricottetcollection.com/library_met_newspapers.html
http://www.thetricottetcollection.com/library_met_manuscripts.html

However I haven't done it until now because I don't know the laws 
regarding copyrights.


Would someone know if diffusing a transcript instead of a scan is legal?
Should articles be more than 30 years old for instance?
If the newspaper does not exist anymore, is there still a copyright?
What is the situation for correspondence letters that I own, from living 
or deceased individuals?


I'm especially looking for information related to US law, but also to the 
Italian one. I'd like to give access to a high resolution digital copy of 
the famous Walter Molino drawing of Holbrook in the 1946 newspaper La 
Domenica del Corriere, based on a copy I own.



Thank you for your help,

Arnaud


The Tricottet Collection
(Historic Minerals, Fossils  Meteorites)
http://www.thetricottetcollection.com/
http://www.facebook.com/TheTricottetCollection
http://twitter.com/TricottetColl#



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http://www.meteoritecentral.com/mailing-list-archives.html

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http://six.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list 


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Re: [meteorite-list] copyright questions - newspaper articles correspondence

2011-05-03 Thread mmartin

Hi Arnaud,

I've got some experience with US copyright law and will outline it the  
best I can:


1.  Works published before 1978 remain protected under copyright law  
for 75 years from the date of their original publication.  Works  
published on or after January 1, 1978 as protected by copyright laws  
until 50 years after the death of the author.


2.  As for the newspaper no longer existing, I believe the above rule  
applies.  If the newspaper company owned the copyright (i.e. the  
article was written by a staff member) then the copyright will expire  
based on it's publication date as described above.  If it was reader  
contributed or written by a person who was not employed by the  
newspaper, then the author owns the copyright, and not the newspaper  
and the date of death would apply.


3.  Your intended use for educational, non-commercial value would most  
likely be viewed as fair use based on the mission of your  
organization, however given the very public nature of the web and your  
desire to be as clean as possible legally, I would suggest that you  
spend a little money for advice from an attorney who specializes in  
copyright law.  A few hundred dollars now could be well worth the  
savings if a disgruntled person saw their information published on a  
public website without their permission.


4.  I am not familiar with copyrights laws and how they apply to  
personal correspondence.  Surely documents that you have written are  
yours freely to use, however the ones written by others may be a  
different story.  I'm not going to say any more on this because I  
simply don't know.


There are lots of restrictions of fair use too...so be mindful that  
just because a person intends to use a published work for educational  
purposes that you can use another person's work in its entirety.   
Restrictions are in place that limit how much of a work can be used,  
even for educational purposes.  There are also time limits in some  
instances, in instances known as 'spontaneous' copies.  An example of  
this would be if a story was just published and waiting to obtain  
copyright permission for educational use would cause the loss of  
educational value, then fair use comes into play.  Even then there are  
still restrictions on the amount of the source that may be copied and  
the amount of images that may be copies as well.  In my opinion, it's  
worth getting an informed decision by someone qualified.


Mind you, I am not an attorney, but simply a teacher who has done  
research on this in the past.


Aloha,


Matthew Martin
Meteorite Treasures
P.O. Box 164, Kaaawa, HI 96730
www.meteoritetreasures.com






On Tue, May 3, 2011 at 10:18 AM, The Tricottet Collection  
tricottetc...@live.com wrote:



Dear list members,

I'd like to give access on my website to transcripts of my  
newspaper articles and original correspondence related to meteorites  
(and minerals  fossils...):


http://www.thetricottetcollection.com/library_met_newspapers.html
http://www.thetricottetcollection.com/library_met_manuscripts.html

However I haven't done it until now because I don't know the laws  
regarding copyrights.


Would someone know if diffusing a transcript instead of a scan is legal?
Should articles be more than 30 years old for instance?
If the newspaper does not exist anymore, is there still a copyright?
What is the situation for correspondence letters that I own, from  
living or deceased individuals?


I'm especially looking for information related to US law, but  
also to the Italian one. I'd like to give access to a high resolution  
digital copy of the famous Walter Molino drawing of Holbrook in the  
1946 newspaper La Domenica del Corriere, based on a copy I own.



Thank you for your help,

Arnaud


The Tricottet Collection
(Historic Minerals, Fossils  Meteorites)
http://www.thetricottetcollection.com/
http://www.facebook.com/TheTricottetCollection
http://twitter.com/TricottetColl#




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