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Steve Welburn, 2012-07-26 02:24 PM


Legislation

(part of WP1_1_Research_Of_Available_Resources)

JISC Web2 Rights
JISC Legal

There are three main areas of law affecting data management:
  • Intellectual Property (in particular copyright)
  • Data Protection
  • Freedom of Information

Copyright

Copyright grants the copyright holder rights relating to the use of the copyright material, in addition certain moral rights are granted to the creator of the materials. Copyright is automatically granted when new creative material is produced - e.g. the material must be more than a simple collection of other data. Copyright is a separate item of property to original work and the sale of the original work does not automatically pass copyright on to the new owner of that work (e.g. selling a score or painting does not automatically transfer the copyright). The particular rights and the duration of the copyright period are affected by the type of material.

For audio and digital music research, rights of particular interest relate to:
  • musical compositions and audio recordings - a CD can be covered by three separate copyrights, one for the design of the packaging, one for the sound recording on the CD and one for the musical composition recorded
  • typographical arrangements - these cover not only papers (which are also covered as literary works) but also the layout of spreadsheets and design of databases.

It is important to note that copyright does not cover the ideas expressed within a work, only the particular form that that work has been captured in. The data within a spreadsheet is not copyright, only the particular layout of that data.

We note that simple anthologies - e.g. a collection of "complete works" or works created during a certain period - do not get copyright on the content, although the typographical layout may be copyright.

Database rights

The Copyright and Rights in Databases Regulations 1997

UK database rights information at out-law.com

UK database rights at the UK Intellectual Property Office

UK

Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988

Fair dealing / fair use

Lots of fact sheets at The UK Copyright Service

Includes the Top 10 Copyright Myths

UK Intellectual Property Office has a page on copyright including a downloadable booklet.

UK university materials regarding copyright and intellectual property:

Pay The Piper has a post explaining music copyright

If you compose a completely original piece of music then it is your own property - you own the copyright, in other words.

Arranging existing music is fraught with difficulties. To put it very simply (and this is indeed a gross simplification) until the composer has been dead for seventy years his music is copyright and you may not make a written arrangement of it without permission.

...lots more good info on the page

Music Publishers Association - MPA

Performing Rights Society - PRS

Guide to Copyright in Schools

PRS - Performing Rights Society - FAQ, includes details on copyright

Abroad

Australian IP law blog posts re. media and copyright. Includes: US articles from Public Domain Sherpa Tutorial on Copyright and the Public Domain
  • What makes a derivative work
    derivative must use enough of the prior work that the average person would conclude that it had been based on or adapted from the prior work
  • Compilations
    compilations are (c) if they show minimal creativity (e.g. not just all works by someone or by date)
  • Copyright Renewal
    Many works did not have copyright renewed and therefore went out of copyright and into the public domain in the US - estimated 15% of works had copyright renewed. Renewals will appear in the online US copyright database for works from 1950-1963,

CHM Super Sound (a South Pacific record company) state that :

A melodic phrase of a song is in copyright. The lyrics are in copyright. Chord progressions in a music composition however, are not copyright material.

University of Washington Copyright Connection

WIPO Understanding Copyright and Related Rights

Berne Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic Works

Chord Progressions and Copyright:

Data Protection

Data Protection Act 1998

Data protection protects the rights iof individuals over their personal information, particularly data should only be used for the purposes for which it has been gathered and should be held appropriately securely.

QMUL Academic Registry and Council Secretariat (ARCS) information on data protection

Canterbury Christchurch

Freedom Of Information

Freedom Of Information Act 2000

Freedom of information gives people the right to request data held by public bodies - it is not a question of who originated the data, rather a question of who holds it.

QMUL information on Freedom of Information

QMUL slides for a presentation on Data Protection, Freedom of Information and Research

States that for research:
  • Data can be held indefinitely
  • Is not subject to FoI requests - unless individuals identified in published research
  • Can be used for other research uses
  • May be exempt from FoI requests on grounds of future publication or commercial interest

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