Copyright Basics

Copyright is part of the United States (title 17, U.S. Code) and international law that grants rights and protection to authors and developers of creative works. Among the rights granted are the rights to:
  • reproduce the work;
  • prepare derivative works based upon the work;
  • distribute copies of the work to the public perform the work publicly,
  • display the copyrighted work publicly,
  • perform the work publicly by means of a digital audio transmission and,
  • assign these rights to others.

It should be clear that copyright only protects works that are “fixed in a tangible form of expression.” Copyright does not protect ideas or processes (although processes can be patented).

To make use of copyright protected material without the consent of the author is a violation of the law. The exceptions to this are works that have passed into the public domain (over 70 years old) and works used in the manner prescribed under the Fair Use part of the copyright law.

For additional information on Copyright Basics, visit the U.S. Copyright Office, Copyright Basics Web site.

Thanks to Austin Community College for permission to use the information from their copyright pages.

Site content copyright 2008, Shoreline Community College.
This page last updated on 6/11/2007.
Questions or comments about the site? Contact us.
SCC Library Multi-Search


What is OSIS Search?