Copyright Policy
1.0 Overview
It is the policy of Bladen Community College to support the lawful limitations of the unauthorized duplication and use of copyrighted materials. The college does not condone any infringement on the property rights of copyright owners. Compliance with federal copyright law is expected of all students, faculty, and staff at the College.
"Copyright" is legal protection for creative intellectual works, which is broadly interpreted to cover any expression of an idea. Text (including email and web information), graphics, art, photographs, music and software are examples of types of work protected by copyright. The creator of the work is the initial copyright owner.
2.0 Application
Employees, students and College visitors are prohibited from the use or duplication of any copyright materials not allowed by copyright law, fair use guidelines sanctioned by Congress, licenses or contractual agreements. Willful violations also are considered to be in violation of expected standards of behavior for employees and students and can result in disciplinary action.
U.S. federal law treats the unauthorized uploading, downloading, or sharing of copyrighted material as an offense that carries legal consequences. Any College computer account holder who infringes copyright laws risks possible sanctions by the copyright holder, loss of access to the College networks, and disciplinary actions by the College.
The College prohibits any infringement of intellectual property rights by any member of the College community. It is against College policy to participate in the violation of the intellectual property rights of others. Please refer to College policies regarding use of the College computing resources: Technology Use Policy 5.10.
3.0 Fair Use
Copyright infringement occurs when a copy is made of any copyrighted work, such as songs, videos, software, cartoons, photographs, stories, or novels, without permission from the copyright owner and without falling within the specific exceptions provided for under the copyright laws. These exceptions include, without limitation, "fair use," which is briefly described below, and provisions of the Audio Home Recording Act, which allow for noncommercial copying of lawfully acquired music onto recordable storage devices.
- Unless allowed as "fair use" under federal law, permission must be acquired from the copyright owner prior to copying copyrighted material. Fair use is based on the following standards:
- the purpose and character of the use, including whether such use is of a commercial nature or is for nonprofit educational purposes;
- the nature of the copyrighted work;
- the amount of and the substantiality of the portion used in relation to the copyrighted work as a whole; and
- the effect of the use upon the potential market for, or value of, the copyrighted work.
4.0 Unlawful Reproduction/Copying
No individual may use a copier, or request the print shop to copy excerpts of a work, in a manner exceeding the fair use limitations under federal law either as to the extent of the copying or as to the later use of the copy.
Repeated copying. The single copies authorized under federal law are limited to "isolated and unrelated" production and exclude copying where the library or any college employee "is aware or has substantial reason to believe" that copying on one occasion or series of occasions is causing multiple copies of the same material. Federal law does not authorize "systematic" copying except interlibrary arrangements not having the "purpose or effect" of providing the receiving library "such aggregate quantities as to substitute for a subscription to or purchase of such work."
5.0 Peer to peer File Sharing and Copyright Infringement
Peer to peer computing has many uses. Peer to peer networks can be used to share and exchange files, music, movies, software, and other electronic materials. The use of networks to upload, download or share copyrighted material, such as movies, music, and software, may violate the rights of copyright holders.
In the peer to peer file-sharing context, infringement may occur, for example, when one person purchases an authorized copy and then uploads it to a peer to peer network. When one person purchases a media file, creates a digital copy, and then uses a peer to peer network to share that digital copy with others, both the individual who makes the file available and those making copies may be found to have infringed the rights of the copyright owner(s) and may be violating federal copyright law.
BCC advises all computer account holders to use extreme caution when installing peer to peer software and to read all user agreements carefully beforehand. Users need to read all available documentation from the peer to peer software provider and understand how the peer to peer software is configured and operates. Informed users are able to avoid unwitting copyright violations.
Some peer to peer programs have default settings that index the files on user computers and make music or film files that have been legitimately acquired available to other users of the peer to peer network without the original user being aware of the activity. In such cases, a user may be unwittingly participating in copyright infringement. In this context, not being aware that a user’s personal computer is making files available to other users may not be a defense to copyright infringement.
6.0 Copyright Infringement Notifications and Sanctions
As an Internet Service Provider (ISP) for students, faculty, and staff, the College receives notices from the RIAA (Recording Industry Association of America) or MPAA (Motion Picture Association of America) identifying the IP (Internet Protocol) addresses of the College account holders believed to be sharing copies of copyrighted music and videos without authorization. The College reserves the right to require that the infringing conduct cease immediately; where necessary, the College will revoke the identified individual’s access to the College computer system.
Infringing conduct exposes the infringer to the risk of legal penalties, both civil and criminal. Civil penalties may include actual damages and profits, or statutory damages (ranging from $750 to $30,000 per work that is infringed). Moreover, the courts can also award reasonable attorney’s fees and costs and increase the damages in the case of a willful infringement. Criminal penalties can include fines and imprisonment.
In the case of media (movie and music) file sharing, the RIAA or MPAA has often presented an option for the alleged illegal file sharer to settle the lawsuit out of court for some amount of money. If the user is determined to have infringed copyrights, whether through peer to peer networks or other means, and has not settled, he or she may also be subject to sanctions such as monetary damages and the required destruction of all unauthorized copies. In certain circumstances, federal authorities can criminally prosecute copyright infringement. Persons participating in illegal file sharing, may be subject to a lawsuit even after the illegal copy or copies of copyrighted material have been destroyed.
7.0 Types of Copyright Infringement Notifications
Copyright holders and organizations that represent copyright holders, such as the RIAA and MPAA, typically send out three different types of communications related to copyright infringement:
- Cease and desist, or copyright infringement, notices – The purpose of these notices is to stop the illegal possession and distribution of copyrighted material. When the Information Technology Department receives these notices from copyright holders or their representatives, IT contacts the user whose Internet Protocol (IP) address has been identified in the notice. IT notifies the user that illegal copies of copyrighted materials must be destroyed.
- Pre-litigation notices – These letters are used by copyright holders and their representatives prior to filing a lawsuit to recover, by way of a settlement, financial damages caused by the illegal distribution of copyrighted material. If you have been identified as participating in the illegal downloading or uploading of copyrighted materials, you may receive one of these notices, even if you have already destroyed your copy (or copies) of the material(s) in question.
- Subpoenas – These notices indicate that the copyright holder has filed a lawsuit to recover damages for the illegal distribution of copyrighted material. If the court finds the user liable, he or she will be subject to fines and penalties.
The College prohibits the use of its computing resources to conduct illegal activity. The community college complies with applicable federal, state, and local laws and requires that users do the same.
The College enforces its own policies and standards pertaining to the electronic communication environment (Technology Use Policy 5.10); regardless of whether a copyright holder pursues legal action.
8.0 Examples of Most Frequent Copyright Violations:
- Use of copyrighted print material without acknowledgement of source or permission of author
- Copying for retail distribution any copyrighted material without permission/license
- Downloading any copyrighted material without license, purchase or permission
- Sharing of legally downloaded electronic media with person who does not have legal right of possession
- Claiming authorship of creatorship of intellectual property not one’s own
- Distributing unauthorized copies of copyrighted materials beyond a classroom setting (website, for example) in a forum that is publicly accessible
- Quoting without citation any intellectual property not one’s own for use in a publishable document