|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Finding Things | Who Owns It? |
|
|
|
||||||
|
Who Owns It?
Now that you have become adept at finding things on the Web, an important
question is that of ownership and copyright: what things on the Web may be
freely downloaded and what things may not be, at least
not without restrictions? For Web users in the K-12 environment this is of
double importance: not only should you be aware of personal legal
liabilities, you also are generally influencing the attitudes of students
toward these issues, which may have much larger implications than your personal
legal exposure.
Copyright Law
Of course, even in the above "clear-cut" situations things may still be murky.
For example, someone may give you permission to copy something from their page
when they do not have the authority to do so. If they
insert someone's corporate logo on their page and then give you permission
to copy it, they may have violated copyright or trademark law
in placing the image there to begin with. This example
illustrates two important
principles:
Notice carefully the distinction:
you may usually insert a link to someone else's Web material in your
pages without restriction; the issue of ownership becomes important only when
you attempt to download material (text, images, movies, . . .) from other Web
sites and incorporate it directly into your Web material.
More Information
|
||||||||||
|
|
||||||||||