Fair Dealing Situations

Case One: Research

With the use of research under fair dealing, students may use any works, as well as make copies of any work. Although, this extent of use is allowed, no more than ten percent of the work can be copied for the use of research. Also, if the research is to be published for any reason, the works may not be included, and should instead be sourced because it may not always fall under fair dealing to include them.

Case Two: Satire

When it comes to using copyright-protected works for satirical purposes, students may communicate and/or reproduce in either paper or electronic form short excerpts from a work. However, the amount of work reproduced may not exceed ten percent of a given work, or the entirety of a poem or an entire artistic work.

Case Three: Education

With fair dealing in education, the rules are very lenient. It ranges from allowing ten percent to the entirety of work to be copied for educational purposes. It depends on what type of work it is as well as what it will be used for.

Case Four: Criticism

In fair dealing, when reviewing or critiquing a specific work, students may copy ten percent of the work, and may include parts of the work in their own work. If this is used though, the source and the authors or creators must be listed.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Creating Sound Effects

Understanding Copyright