
E-NewsletterThe use, receipt, or sending of information through this Site does not create, nor is it intended to create, an attorney-client relationship with any of the attorneys at Clark and Allen, PC, or the firm itself. The sending of an e-mail to, or receipt of an e-mail from, any attorney or employee of Clark and Allen, PC does not create an attorney-client relationship. For the full Terms of Use governing this Site, please visit this Terms of Use link. Click here to sign up for our technology newsletter. Grading Teachers on Copyright Law -- Videotaping for the ClassroomIf you're a teacher, you should know if and when you may legally tape educational TV programs and use them in your classroom.As educators find that books and lectures don't impress or excite today's image-saturated youth, televisions are becoming as common in the classroom as blackboards. There is even a special closed-circuit television network just for high schools. Given the widespread availability of videocassette recorders, many teachers need to know if and when they may legally tape educational TV programs off the air and show them to their students. Permission and the Fair Use DoctrineTelevision programs, like most other types of expression, are protected by federal copyright laws. This means that as a general rule, a TV program can legally be taped and shown to students only with the copyright owner's permission. Fortunately, the Copyright Act contains a special exception for educational uses of copyrighted materials. Under what is known as the "fair use" rule, someone other than the copyright owner may make limited use of a copyrighted work without permission for purposes such as teaching, research, scholarship, criticism, parody, and news reporting. Recording GuidelinesTo help educators determine when off-air taping is and is not a fair use, a set of concrete guidelines was created by a committee comprising representatives from educational organizations and copyright owners. These guidelines (known officially as "Guidelines for Off-Air Recording of Broadcast Programming for Educational Purposes") do not have the force of law and have never been tested in the courts. Many producers do not agree with them, and many teachers aren't thrilled either, because they offer only limited, temporary access to broadcast materials. However, most copyright experts believe that taping that falls within the guidelines is permissible and would be upheld as a fair use if challenged in court. The guidelines apply only to off-air taping by nonprofit educational institutions, including all public schools and most private schools and colleges.The guidelines do not apply to for-profit language or trade schools. Here are the basic rules:
The guidelines do not discuss whether or not a teacher may record a program at home for school use. It seems likely, however, that the practice is permissible so long as all the other guidelines are followed. No independent organization enforces these guidelines. Schools that want to document their compliance should make and keep records of teacher requests, dates of taping, times shown, and number of copies made. Beyond the GuidelinesWhat the guidelines don't allow or cover -- for example, keeping a taped program more than ten days or taping a cable channel offering -- may or may not be permissible under the fair use doctrine. To determine whether or not a particular use is a fair use, four rather vague factors must be considered:
Here's a simple way to think about: a use that takes money out of a copyright owner's pocket is probably not a fair use. Thus, taping beyond the scope of the guidelines is probably not a fair use if the program's producer makes videotapes available to the schools or the public for purchase or rental, because the taping reduces the market for such tapes.This is particularly true where videotapes are made available to schools at special discounts. If videotapes are not available, limited taping might be a fair use, but no one knows for sure because no court has considered the question.
Taping beyond that permitted by the guidelines may be permissible for programs broadcast on PBS (Public Broadcasting System) stations. Producers of many PBS programs permit educational institutions to tape their programs off the air and show them for longer than ten days -- sometimes for years. This is not true for all PBS programs, and the scope of the use allowed varies from show to show. Contact the educational or public service coordinator at your local PBS station for information about exceeding the guidelines for any particular PBS program.
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