-----Original Message-----
From: John Conway
To: 'Judith Stansfield '
Sent: 14/03/03 15:16
Subject: RE: Copyright
Everyone here is recommended to put their notes onthe intranet.
However, to get back to the central question - copyright - what happens
if a lecture has "bent" the rules and used diagrams etc in his
presentation. Putting the notes on the web is then a serious and public
breach of copyright. but do all lecturers really get - or need to get -
copyright permission to include published material in their
presentations? If so it would seriously undermine "custom & practice".
I've also heard that one who tried to get copyright clearance was
greeted with astonishment by the publishers!!!
John Conway
DO
Royal Agricultural College
-----Original Message-----
From: Judith Stansfield
To: [log in to unmask]
Sent: 14/03/03 14:08
Subject: Re: Copyright
I think the staff at some enlightened Universities put their lecture
notes
upon the inranet for all students to access
Cheers
Judith
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Judith Stansfield
SEN ICT Consultant
NASEN ICT Group
BDACC Reviews and Literature Editor
NAACE SEN Reference Point
http://web.onyxnet.co.uk/Stass-onyxnet.co.uk
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
----- Original Message -----
From: "Eleanor Drummond" <[log in to unmask]>
To: <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: Friday, March 14, 2003 1:04 PM
Subject: Re: Copyright
> Hoary chestnut this - surely no-one can complain at a
> student recording a lecture any more than if there was a
> student capable of taking shorthand notes and therefore
> recording the lecture verbatim. The staff are there to
> communicate information and promote thought/discussion
> around their subject area. If they are so precious about
> their notes, they shouldn't be teaching. Some of them have
> been known to get round this by recommending their own
> publications as a set text!!!
>
> --
> Eleanor Drummond
> Heriot-Watt University
>
>
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