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Instructor Resources: Copyright: Fair Use

Fair Use: An Overview

Fair Use

Fair use is the flexible and dynamic exception to copyright law that serves to balance the rights of creators with the public interest in using copyrighted works to advance education, to comment and criticize, and to make new creative content. Its flexibility is often somewhat intimidating or frightening because when considering fair use it is very rare to know with certainty that a use is fair, only that it is more or less likely to be fair. It can be frustrating that the law does not give us any clear answers regarding amounts we can use and know that we are "safe." Fortunately, there are ways of understanding the purpose and function of fair use that can help us feel more confident about evaluations and maybe even come to love fair use for its flexibility.

 


 

 

Image Credit: portions of Fair Use Fundamentals infographic:  Association of Research Libraries CC-BY

The Four Factors

The Four Fair Use Factors listed

Image Credit: portions of Fair Use Fundamentals infographic:  Association of Research Libraries CC-BY

Fair use is determined by considering four factors of that use. No one factor is determinative; each factor must be considered and weighed. Usually after considering each of the four factors and weighing how much each fact of your particular situation favors or disfavors fair use, you are left with an overall sense that your use is "probably fair" or "probably not fair." Really, only the courts can offer us definitive answers.

1.      Purpose and Character of the Use

How do you propose to use the work? Purposes that favor fair use include education, scholarship, research, news reporting, criticism and commentary. Non-profit purposes also favor fair use. Commercial uses weigh against fair use.

The biggest mistake we see educators making is mistaking their educational context for an educational purpose. If you create a class website or presentation and put a pretty picture on it primarily for decoration or visual interest, this is very different from an image about which you are providing direct instruction.

 

 

Image by the World Bank Photo Collection, CC BY-NC-SA 2.0

2.         Nature of the Copyrighted Work

Remembering copyright is designed to protect works of creative expression, the more highly creative the work you want to use is, the more fair use is weighed against. This is, of course, subjective. We might say, in general, a novel would be more highly creative than a work of non-fiction but, of course, there is a huge range of creativity within the huge category of "non-fiction." Unpublished works would also be less likely to qualify for a fair use than published works

3.          Portion Used

Slice of pumpkin pie

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Image by Dennis Wilkinson, Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.0 Generic (CC BY-NC-SA 2.0)

This is the one where everyone seems to want to see some percentage or number of pages that will always be fair. There is no such number. The goal of fair use is to make available a wide and unpredictable set uses. Could a legislator predict in advance that a future satirist would never need more than ten percent of a work in order to make their point? Of course not.  

As a general principle: using less of a work is always more likely to be fair than using more. The smaller the portion used is relative to the whole, the more likely the use is to be fair.  

It is also true, however, that using an entire work can be and often is a fair use.

Another guiding principle: using only the portion of a work that is absolutely necessary in order to meet the educational (or other fair) purpose you have in mind is more likely to be fair than using more than is necessary. For example, if you are considering copying a 4 page article for your class because the author makes an argument you'd like to discuss but that argument could be well understood by reading just a couple of paragraphs of the article, copying just those paragraphs would much more strongly favor fair use than copying the whole article.

The more the portion you want to use represents the "heart of the work," the less likely your use is to be fair. This can be a very difficult one to assess.

4.      Effect of the Use on the Potential Market 

The most useful way to think about this factor is to ask if your use could substitute for the original in the marketplace. Would your use substitute for sales either to your students or to anyone else? A confusing piece here is the permissions market. A strong market exists in selling permissions to use content, especially things like book chapters and journal articles. So it can be easy to say "Oh, of course my student won't be subscribing to Professional Journal X so copying an article certainly doesn't substitute in the market." But it would substitute for that secondary permissions market. We don't at this time have truly conclusive case law to guide us in thinking about the permissions market but it does seem very likely that where there is a viable permissions market for the material you want to use, this would weigh against fair use.

A Balancing Test

Once you have looked at all of the factors, you can assess if taken as a whole your use seems likely to be fair or likely to be unfair. No single factor is determinative and you could "strike out" in three categories but have the remaining category weigh so strongly in favor of fair use that, overall, your use is fair. We discuss this in more depth in "Thinking about Fair Use: Transformativeness" (click on the Transformativeness tab in the pull down menu above).

 

 

 

Image by Michael Brewer &
ALA Office of Information Technology Policy, CC BY-NC-SA 3.0