Library Grand Rounds

Copyright and Fair Use: What Clinicians
and Educators Need to Know

Robert B. Donin, General Counsel, Dartmouth College
December 19, 2002

True or False?

  • The parameters of "copyright" and "fair use" are defined by the U.S. Constitution.

  • Copyright doesn't apply to digital (electronic) works (and works transformed into a digital format).

  • If an author dies, her work moves into "public domain" (i.e., is not copyrightable).

  • Institutions and other corporate entities can't be copyright-holders.

  • "Fair use" means that educators can use copyrighted content in any educational setting.

  • Authors automatically hold copyright to the articles they write, and/or can use that content in any way they wish.

Want the answers to the above? Want answers to your questions about copyright and fair use? Wondering if you need to secure copyright permission before dropping that image - chart, picture, graph - into your PowerPoint presentation? If you can provide the full text of your recent journal articles on your Web site? What do clinicians/educators need to know about copyright and fair use, really?

Bob Donin, General Counsel for Dartmouth College (including the Dartmouth Medical School) presented a brief tutorial on copyright and fair use, and ran through some real-life cases relevant to your work.

We encouraged folks to send us questions about copyright and fair use - real situations you've faced or believe you may face. We selected several and presented brief case studies as part of the Grand Rounds.

The purpose of this Library Grand Rounds is not to make lawyers of you all, but rather to:

  • help you become more comfortable with the concepts of copyright, fair use, and other areas germane to use of "intellectual property."

  • help you know when you should seek advice.

  • introduce you to information resources sponsored both by Dartmouth and by other entities.

Library Grand Rounds are a forum for presenting information resources and tools of interest to Dartmouth clinicians. Please contact Karen.Odato@Dartmouth.EDU, the Libraries' Education Coordinator, if you have questions, comments or suggestions for future Library Grand Rounds.


The Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center designates this educational activity for up to one hour in Category I credit towards the AMA Physician's Recognition Award. Each physician should claim only those hours of credit that he or she actually spent in the educational activity. The Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education to provide continuing medical education for physicians.




Last update 23-December-2002 by Biomedical Libraries Web Group
http://www.dartmouth.edu/~biomed/
©2002 Trustees of Dartmouth College
Hanover, New Hampshire 03755 USA