The Digital Media Licensing Association (DMLA), a North
American trade association representing the interests of the image
licensing industry, has prepared a power point presentation that
it will make available to the public that educates users of images
as well as visual artists on the basics of copyright. Using the Copyright
Act, images from real case examples, and images provided by members
for discussion purposes, it walks you through what copyright protects
and for how long, illustrating topics such as fair use, what is an
infringement and what is not, and how the Digital Millennium Copyright
Act can be used to remove infringing works from the internet. It
is geared to non-lawyers and is presented in a clear and informative
way. Slide notes are included to make it easy for anyone to take
the presentation to a design class, an ad agency or any other interested
organization. The presentation is prepared by Nancy E. Wolff, counsel
to DMLA and the leading authority in the area of image licensing
and the law.
The PowerPoint presentation is intended
as an overview to teach the basics of copyright and how it applies
to image licensing. It is complete with speaker notes and visual
samples supplied by DMLA members. A section at the end discusses
the enforcement of copyright on the Internet. The presentation is
available for download for teaching purposes on a royalty-free basis
provided you attribute it to DMLA. You may not repackage or sell
the presentation. You are free to include your own examples and anecdotes.
It takes about an hour to and hour and a half to present depending
on audience questions. If you only have an hour, slides 53 through
59 relate to copyright enforcement, registration and DMCA issues
and can be skipped if you run out of time as they are a discrete
section. Please check the version you use with the DMLA Web site
before each use as it will be updated as the laws change. The
current document
version is "DMLA Copyright 080108." If you're having difficultly downloading the presentation using the button above, you can click here to access the file directly.