Noticing Newbies
This week: Copyright? What? Edited by: Sara♥Jean More Newsletters By This Editor
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I'm so excited to be one of your regular newsletter editors now. I feel as if I'm among greats, the other editors of Noticing Newbies are so wonderful! I hope that I can bring you some information that you find useful.
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Copyright? What?
Copyright laws can be incredibly confusing, and it turns out that most of us use them without even knowing what they are!
There is no way I can cover all of the laws in one newsletter, but I can at least give you a little information that might be useful to you, personally. Since there is a copyright symbol at the bottom of every page on this site, it's important you have at least some knowledge of what it means. (And I can give you some resources at the bottom to where you can find some more information.)
There is a U.S. Copyright Office - but you don't have to send work into it for it to be covered by the Copyright laws.
That's right! The reason this site can put that your work has a Copyright the moment you post it is... well, because it does! The moment something is written by you, it has a copyright, and you are at least protected in some ways.
If, however, you believe your copyright has been infringed, you will have to register with the U.S. Copyright Office before you can bring lawsuit.
But I don't live in the U.S., am I covered, too?
Believe it or not, you are! All works that are unpublished, no matter the nationality of the author, are covered in the U.S. Don't quote me on this part, because I'm not sure and I can't find anything online to find the information, but I do believe that since this website is hosted in the U.S., that would also contribute to you being covered here. (And most of the works on this site are unpublished.)
Already published works look a little more complicated and require some kind of copyright treaty with the U.S. by the country that the work is published in. That one would also take a bit more research.
Minors can have a Copyright, too.
This means, those on this site that are under 18? You are protected, too. People don't have the right to take your work and claim it as their own.
Can other people use my work at all if it has a Copyright?
This... is complicated. There are Fair Use laws, and... well goodness, it's just complicated. There is a document put out by Columbia University that might help a bit - the left column describes things that do fall under the Fair Use, and the right column describes things that do not fall under Fair Use, and therefore violate Copyright. http://copyright.columbia.edu/copyright/files/2009/10/fairusechecklist.pdf
Heh, I told you it was confusing! There are two pages involved, and it provides the most clear idea of, at least, what should NOT be done over on the right side. This can help you, as well, if you intend to use someone else's work within your own.
Probably one of the most important pieces to all of this is giving credit to where it is due. If you use some of someone else's work, give them credit for it. That way, you're not claiming it as your own. If someone else asks permission to use parts of your work, ask them to give you credit. It's only right.
http://intellectual-property.lawyers.com/copyrights/Copyright-FAQ.html#25 - This site is a great source for clarification and other Copyright Law questions.
http://libweb.uoregon.edu/reserves/copyrightfaq.html - This website is from the University of Oregon, and covers some of the Fair Use questions that people may have.
If you ever feel you want to use something that someone else has written as a part of your own work, I believe it is very important to discover what one can and cannot do with the things that they find online, in books, and even on a tossed aside and crumpled piece of notebook paper. Always be very, very careful if it is not yours.
As for protecting yourself? Remember that you can set your work to only be seen by people on this site! There are options such as, "Registered Users and Higher" which means that people who haven't posted anything, but have registered with the site, can see it along with everyone else. "Registered Authors and Higher" means that only other people who have also put their work on this site can see yours. You can restrict an item to groups, to case colors, and to status on the site if you don't want to leave it open for everyone on the internet to look at. You can even restrict an item to where only YOU can see it. Setting your Access Restrictions (section 2 when creating an item) is another way to offer a bit more protection to yourself from those who might wish to take your work. |
Well, this is a Noticing Newbies newsletter, so I'll highlight some of our newbies! Don't forget to drop them a review if you read their work.
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| | Waiting (13+) A story of a young girl who can't seem to find her place in the world. #1786827 by Marissa Ann |
| | Invalid Item This item number is not valid. #1786822 by Not Available. |
| | Invalid Item This item number is not valid. #1786854 by Not Available. |
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Have an opinion on what you've read here today? Then send the Editor feedback! Find an item that you think would be perfect for showcasing here? Submit it for consideration in the newsletter! https://www.Writing.Com/go/nl_form
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From my March 30th Newsletter "Noticing Newbies Newsletter (March 30, 2011)"
Nina_C : I have always had problems with those little dots and curvy things in sentences (colons, semicolons), but the tutorial was very well done. I like the instructions, each was well put, understandable, and the examples were easy to understand. Thank you!
You're welcome! The tutorials were fun to write.
jackflash: Your use of the colon in place of a semi-colon is something I've never seen before. Not that it's wrong or that I'm outraged by it. Just never seen it before. Thanks, but I doubt I'll ever use one like that.
I was actually quite surprised at some of the rules I came across, and had not heard of several of them myself. I wanted to, however, make a resource that included everything. Some of them can use different forms of punctuation and still be correct, nothing wrong with using what you're comfortable with!
From the April 6th Newsletter "Noticing Newbies Newsletter (April 6, 2011)"
ferninthewindThis is excellent! It's exactly what I've been wanting people to realize. Praise is great, but I put my work on here for critique as well.
Also, I thought I'd lend you my motto for people who are worried I don't care about their opinion when it comes to my writing:
"All of society is a potential reader. You are part of of society."
That's a great quote! Thank you so much for sharing it with all of us.
Doug Rainbow My view, a minority position on this site, is that a public review should be addressed to the readership, not the author, as a review would appear in, say, The New York Times. It should find and identify the "story" -- the newsworthiness -- of the contribution and write it. For me, anything posted for the public at WDC should be readable. The author's reaction is not a primary consideration.
I disagree with this, but for only one reason, really. WdC is a lot more personal than the New York Times. Here, it is possible to address the author instead of the general public, as it does arrive in their email box. Whereas those posted in the New York Times are just that, posted specifically for the public view. Our reviews here aren't posted for the public - they are posted for the author, and sometimes the public is allowed to see it also. HOWEVER, that stated, I believe that if good feedback is given, the medium for it means little. The point is to give good and meaningful feedback. |
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