Vocabulary
Getting A Copyright
True or False
The 4 Factors
Your Creations
100

The use of someone else's work and presenting them as your own.

Plagiarism

100

This is what you should do in order to have your work officially recognized or to pursue legal action in court

Register with the US Copyright Office

100

As a student, you can use copyrighted material whenever and however you want. 

False

100

This is the amount of a copyrighted song allowed to be used in another creation. 

30 seconds or less

100

This license enables you to legally use copyrighted material and you should use this as a first resort when looking to use someone else's content in your work. 

Creative Commons

200

These works are free to use and available for unrestricted use; their copyright limit ran out a long time ago.

Public Domain

200

This is when your work's copyright begins; usually, it requires you to have recorded the work somehow. 

Upon creation

200

Leonard shows a copyrighted movie to his friends in his basement. He charges each person $1 to watch it on his 4k theater display. This is permitted by Fair Use.

False - how would this be permitted?

200

This is the amount of a copyrighted movie you can you use in another work. 

10% or 3 minutes

200

When you register your creation with the Copyright Office, this is where your work is protected. 

The United States

300

This is the credit usually given to an owner, creator or author of a copyrighted work when being used in another work regardless of registration or licensing.

Attribution

300

This is where your Copyright Registration goes once you apply, and copies of your work go to be stored.

The US Library of Congress

300

Eva uses quotes from the book on his English paper about Of Mice and Men. This is permitted by Fair Use. 

True - what else must he do?

300
A work that is created to mock a copyrighted work through humorous imitation and are covered under Fair Use. Examples include Weird Al, Content Creators and Saturday Night Live. 

Parody

300

When you illegally use someone else's creation or work in yours. It usually means you haven't asked for permission or sought a license of any kind; nor does it fall under Fair Use. 

Copyright Infringement

400

Permission granted by the copyright holder to copy, distribute, display, transform, and/or perform a copyrighted work. Typically, the owner would receive some form of recognition or payment for use.

License

400

This happens when the US Copyright office receives your registration and work copies. 

Copyright becomes effective

400

Web pages, its text and graphics are copyrighted material. 

True

400

One of the four factors to look at when considering Fair Use. Under this factor, copyrighted work can be used to educate or has been completely transformed.

Purpose

400

This is what you should do when you do have permission to use another creator's work.

Provide Attribution 
500

It's the reproduction of a copyrighted work without the owner's permission, but a small portion of the work is being used or transformed; or the copyrighted work is used for educational purposes, parody, or professional commentary.

Fair Use

500

The number of copyright registrations the US Copyright Office receives daily

2400

500

"Pirating" software, music, or movies means making a permissable and legal copy of it. This usually occurs when you download the file from the internet through file sharing. 

False

500

One of the four factors to look at when considering Fair Use. Under this factor, we look at the marketplace, money made and impact of the new work compared to the original. 

Effect

500

This is the best way to show attribution for works used in your video creation.

Post-Credits Sequence

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