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New Study Shows Remixes Could Be Quoting Copyrighted Material Legally

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New Study Shows Remixes Could Be Quoting Copyrighted Material Legally
Topic: Intellectual Property 11:03 pm EST, Jan  3, 2008

When college kids make mashups of Hollywood movies, are they violating the law? Not necessarily, according to the latest study on copyright and creativity from the Center for Social Media and American University’s Washington College of Law.

The study, Recut, Reframe, Recycle: Quoting Copyrighted Material in User-Generated Video, by Center director Pat Aufderheide and Peter Jaszi, co-director of the law school’s Program on Information Justice and Intellectual Property, shows that many uses of copyrighted material in today’s online videos are eligible for fair use consideration. The study points to a wide variety of practices—satire, parody, negative and positive commentary, discussion-triggers, illustration, diaries, archiving and of course, pastiche or collage (remixes and mashups)—all of which could be legal in some circumstances. Aufderheide and Jaszi are appearing at the Consumer Electronics Show, the largest such trade show in the world, on Jan. 7 to discuss the research.

On review, this seems like a lot of nothing, or rather, a publicity ploy for this Center.

New Study Shows Remixes Could Be Quoting Copyrighted Material Legally



 
 
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