Sentences with phrase «use public domain material»

Anyone is free to use public domain material.

Not exact matches

However, MIBLSI materials are in the public domain and may be used by non-partnering entities when proper credit is given.
SB 1784 by Sen. Larry Taylor / Rep. Dan Huberty clarifies the definition of «open - source instructional material» to refer to resources that reside in the public domain or have been released under an intellectual property license that allows for free use, including courses, course materials, modules, textbooks, videos tests, software and other materials used to support access to knowledge.
Again, seek an attorney's help on how to properly use quoted material, gain written permissions for it, or confirm its public domain status in order to help mitigate your legal risk.
Have you received written permission to use quoted material OR confirmed it as being in the public domain?
I republish older public domain material, and they use archaic spellings and dialect.
If you don't want to hire someone, you can use existing materials, including public domain and PLR (private label rights) items.
You do not have to comply with the license for elements of the material in the public domain or (if) where your use (it) is permitted by an applicable exception or limitation.
LNC makes no claim to ownership of copyright in text that is in the public domain or is subject to Crown Copyright, but you agree nevertheless not to download, print or use such materials except in accordance with the terms and conditions set forth herein.
In that article, Hirtle argues four reasons why efforts by libraries and archives to use their physical control over public domain materials in their collection to impose quasi-copyright control over them are doomed to failure.
They may be happy to use it as a traditional print casebook (those hard bound books do look good on a young lawyer's bookshelf); they may prefer to make it available to their students electronically; they may wish to insert their own teaching notes into our content and then provide their students with either a print, electronic or hybrid version of the teaching material; or they may wish to supplement a principal resource (such as casebook) with other proprietary material (such as text from a doctrinal work) or public domain material (via links to cases, statutes and other resources).
As such, since the materials in question are clearly public domain under federal copyright law, any attempt by a library to place restrictions on the use of this material would be unenforceable under the «federal pre-emption doctrine» (in addition, the library would not like not gain copyright in the pre-1923 music by merely digitizing it: Bridgeman Art Library v Corel, 36 F. Supp.
Using as much or as little EMP / Irwin content as you wish, and supplementing it with additional content (your own or public domain material), you may develop course material in whatever configuration you wish.
Before using any material you believe is in the public domain, you should investigate the copyright status of the work, at least to establish whom to credit even if formal permission is not required.
Any elements that appear in the submission, including, without limitation, images, text, or other materials used must be entirely original and created by the entrant, or be in the public domain.
What if the work is not in the public domain, it is definitely copyrighted, and you want to use it in your business materials?
Don't use third - party works in your business materials unless those works are in the public domain, or you obtain permission from the copyright owner, and your use falls within the scope of that permission.
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