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UsingHistoricalFactsWithoutCrossingtheLineintoPlagiarism

by SB Sarah Friday, April 18, 2008 at 01:29 PM

Jennifer Blake, Roberta Gellis, and Bertrice Small led a session that, unlike many of the fan-friendly sessions, was silent, with notetaking, serious faces, and a great deal of attention. Their session, in a word, was outstanding. My notes are below, which don’t really follow a well-transitioned structure (or any structure for that matter) but let me tell you – these ladies rocked this session like damn and whoa.

Roberta Gellis provided a point by point explanation of copyright law in the US. A few facts to chew over:

Until 1978 individual states determined their own copyright law, and since then copyright has been under federal jurisdiction.
Ideas cannot be copyright – only the way you express the idea.
Copyright provides the right to do and to authorize others to do the following: Reproduce copies, prepare derivative works – e.g. you can authorize Fanfic if you choose - distribute copies by sale, etc.

Roberta Gellis then led a discussion about how to use research material: “I’ve never copied anything from any research book of mine because they’re so deadly dull!”

More,more,more!>
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