Lecture Week 9: Copyright

In the workshop today, we discussed copyright at length and were able to ask questions. I probably have 50 million more questions on topic due to my lack of previous knowledge and high amount interest in the topic (Who knew I would think copyright law was so fascinating?)

I was particularly interested in ‘fair dealing’ and the strictness of it compared to the many shades of grey, and leniency of ‘fair-use’ that my homeland (US) has and that I am much more familiar with. Unlike in the US where ‘fair use’ “permits limited use of copyrighted material without acquiring permission from the rights holders“. A great example of how something is ‘fair use’ in the US is to look at any image used within Wikipedia. For example, if I go to the Wikipedia page for ‘Hamilton: An American Musical’ and click on the featured image it will take me to a page that gives the rationale for fair use of the copyrighted image :

This rational is not viable (legal) in Australia. The only exceptions are if the material is used within Study, criticism or review, Reporting the news, or Parody/satire.

I feel these limitations directly hurt the quality of discourse surrounding texts.

This chat was also very timely as I had posted an article about a possible change to geo-blocking laws in Australia this morning which came about due to The Productivity Commission publishing a draft report with recommendations on all things related to intellectual property :

Screen Shot 2016-05-02 at 8.39.28 PM

 

 

 

 

 

Print Friendly, PDF & Email