[PIJIP-(C)] PIJIP and the AU Senter for Social Media Release Best Practices in 
Copyright and Fair Use for User-Generated ContentImportant announcement, below. 
 

More important announcement:  Prof. Peter Jaszi will be speaking at MCN 2008 in 
Washington, DC. 

Amalyah Keshet
Chair, MCN IP SIG


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

AU's Program on Information Justice and Intellectual Property and Center for 
Social Media
Release Best Practices in Copyright and Fair Use for User-Generated Content

Contact:  
Diane Bickell, AU Public Relations, dbickel at wcl.american.edu or 202-274-4276
Peter Jaszi, Director, PIJIP, pjaszi at wcl.american.edu 240-605-1934

Full text of 'Code of Best Practices in Fair Use for Online Video' (PDF)
<http://www.wcl.american.edu/pijip/download.cfm?downloadfile=FDCD7029-F26B-FBB2-7C3C8D42F60DF20B&typename=dmFile&fieldname=filename>


WASHINGTON, D.C. (July 7, 2008)- The American University's Program on
Information Justice and Intellectual Property (PIJIP) announces the
release of a new code of best practices in fair use for creators in the
burgeoning online video environment. The code was coordinated by PIJIP
and the American University Center for Social Media, with support from
the Ford Foundation through CSM s Future of Public Media Project. Back
in January, we released a report on copyright and remix culture, Recut,
Reframe, Recycle: Quoting Copyrighted Material in User-Generated Video
(wcl.american.edu/pijip/), back in January. The code, which was made
public on July 7, represents the next step. Collaboratively created by a
team of media scholars and lawyers, these best practices will allow
users to make remixes, mashups, and other common online genres with the
knowledge that they are staying within copyright law. The full text of
the code for user generated video is available at wcl.american.edu/pijip.

Until now, anyone uploading a video has run the risk of becoming
inadvertently entangled in an industry skirmish, as media companies
struggle to keep their programs from circulating on the Internet. As
online providers have begun to negotiate with media companies, everyone
has agreed that fair use should be protected. Before the code s release,
there was no clear statement about what constitutes fair use in online
video.

The code identifies, among other things, six kinds of unlicensed uses of
copyrighted material that may be considered fair, under certain
limitations. They are:

    * Commenting or critiquing of copyrighted material
    * Use for illustration or example
    * Incidental or accidental capture of copyrighted material
    * Memorializing or rescuing of an experience or event
    * Use to launch a discussion
    * Recombining to make a new work, such as a mashup or a remix, whose
      elements depend on relationships between existing works

For instance, a blogger's critique of mainstream news is commentary. The
toddler dancing to the song "Let s Go Crazy" is an example of incidental
capture of copyrighted material. Many variations on the popular online
video "Dramatic Chipmunk" may be considered fair use, because they
recombine existing work to create new meaning.

If you would like to receive more information about the code, please
contact us at 202-274-4442.

_*Code of Best Practices Committee Members
*_
*Co-chairs
*
Peter Jaszi, Professor of Law, Faculty Director of the Glushko-Samuelson
Intellectual Property Clinic, Washington College of Law, American University
Patricia Aufderheide, Professor, Director of the Center for Social
Media, School of Communication, American University

*Members
*
Michael C. Donaldson, Esq., Los Angeles
Anthony Falzone, Lecturer, Executive Director, Fair Use Project,
Stanford Law School
Lewis Hyde, Richard L. Thomas Professor of Creative Writing, Kenyon
College; fellow, Berkman Center for Internet and Society, Harvard University
Mizuko Ito, Research Scientist, School of Cinematic Arts, University of
Southern California
Henry Jenkins, Professor, Program Head, Comparative Media Studies,
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Michael Madison, Associate Dean for Research, Associate Professor of
Law, University of Pittsburgh School of Law
Pamela Samuelson, Richard M. Sherman Distinguished Professor of Law and
Information, University of California, Berkeley
Rebecca Tushnet, Professor, Georgetown University Law Center, Georgetown
University
Jennifer Urban, Clinical Associate Professor of Law; Director of
Intellectual Property and Technology Law Clinic, University of Southern
California

*_About PIJIP_
*
The Program on Information Justice and Intellectual Property as American
University Washington College of Law is guided by an explicit focus on
the public interest. Through research, teaching, publications, events,
advocacy and the provision of legal services, PIJIP promotes the
interests of teachers, students, authors, artists, filmmakers, computer
programmers and users, bloggers, inventors, scientists doctors,
patients, workers, consumers and others.

--
Mike Palmedo
Research Coordinator
Program on Information Justice and Intellectual Property
American University, Washington College of Law
4910 Massachutsetts Ave., NW Washington, DC 20016
T - 202-274-4442 | F 202-274-0659
mpalmedo at wcl.american.edu


Reply via email to