Thanks for the info but it is outrageous that a lawyer would use a case
where there is NO decision to claim any kind of "ruling"
The 2nd part about a contract not being able to limit rights otherwise
granted by "fair use" is particularly nuts. There are thousands probably
millions of contracts that restrict rights otherwise granted. That is what
contracts do. Now one can argue about the nature of Ambrose contract but
the idea that an owner can not make and enforce a contract if it were
clearly spelled out is simply absurd.

I do sincerely appreciate your nuanced approach and large rights holders
like MPAA brought much of this on themselves by trying to restrict "fair
use" through the DMCA and other similar actions but trust me it is small
rights holders and distributors that are being socked by institutions who
do in fact digitize and stream entire works ( among other things).


On Thu, May 2, 2013 at 1:21 PM, Shelia D Owens (sowens)
<sow...@memphis.edu>wrote:

>  I participated in this webinar and feel I must  clarify what was
> presented by Linda Enghagen who is an attorney and Professor at the
> University of Massachuesetts at Amherst. Following are actual excerpts from
> the materials she provided as related to the points Farhad made:****
>
> ** **
>
> **1.       **The judge ruled that the purchase of videos that included
> “public performance rights” was sufficient to permit UCLA to lawfully
> digitize, reformat and stream those videos via a secure system to students
> enrolled in specific courses. At the same time, the judge acknowledged that
> no court has ruled on whether this same practice is lawful under fair use.
> In other words, this case does not resolve that question.****
>
> **2.       **Because the case included allegations of violations of both
> federal (copyright infringement) and state law (breach of contract) laws,
> the judge had to determine whether the “preemption doctrine” applied. The
> judge concluded that it did. Therefore, the only claim considered was that
> based on copyright infringement. All the state based claims such as breach
> of contract were dismissed. While there is a degree to which this is a
> highly technical point in the case, it possesses the potential of being
> highly significant. It suggests the answer to an as of yet unresolved
> question of law which is: may a copyright owner put terms and conditions on
> the sale of copyright protected works that limit the rights of a user under
> fair use? This ruling suggests (but does not rule) that copyright owners
> cannot restrict fair use rights of lawful users by imposing overly
> restrictive terms and conditions on the sale. ****
>
> **3.       **One of the rulings in the case against Georgia State
> University was that the 1976 agreement on guidelines for classroom copying
> are not legally binding and are not an appropriate standard for determining
> what does and does not qualify as a fair use.****
>
> **4.       **Also in the GSU case, the judge ruled that repeated use of
> the same work is permitted by copyright law and does not violate fair use.
> This case involved non-fiction books only and has no bearing on video works.
> ****
>
> ** **
>
> I did not feel as though  I was given “permission” after this presentation
> to digitize DVD’s for streaming with obtaining the rights to do so. I could
> apply fair use principles and DMCA to digitize clips for educational
> purposes, but not the full DVD. The judge in the UCLA case felt they had
> purchased the rights with having bought public performance rights. In this
> case, they purchased rights, just not what Ambrose thought was the
> appropriate rights. I still ask for the digital rights.****
>
> ** **
>
> Shelia D. Owens****
>
> Distance Education****
>
> 200 Brister Hall****
>
> (901)678-2236 Office****
>
> (901) 678-5112 Fax****
>
> www.memphis.edu/ecampus****
>
> ** **
>
> *From:* Moshiri, Farhad [mailto:mosh...@uiwtx.edu]
> *Sent:* Wednesday, May 01, 2013 9:18 AM
> *To:* videolib@lists.berkeley.edu
> *Subject:* [Videolib] Is Streaming transformative?****
>
> ** **
>
> Dear Colleagues,****
>
> ** **
>
> Yesterday, I attended a webinar on recent copyright court cases in which
> the presenter stated several points that confused me a lot since they were
> completely the opposite of what I’ve learned up to this day. I need your
> help to clarify these issues.****
>
> ** **
>
> **1.       **The presenter stated that in the case of UCLA vs. Ambrose,
> the judge ruled that  changing the format of DVDs purchased legally with
> PPR to streaming video at UCLA is considered “Transformative” and so it
> falls into “Fair Use” ! As far as I know, this case was dismissed due to
> legal technicalities based on UCLA being a state run public institution and
> the ruling did not address the change of format issue. In addition, I don’t
> understand what PPR has to do with change of format? Am I wrong?****
>
> ** **
>
> **2.       **The presenter stated that copyright law, since it is a
> federal law, prevails over contract law which is under state law. So,
> digitizing books or transferring DVDs into streaming is fair use even if
> the contract with the publisher accepted by the consumer states otherwise!
> ****
>
> ** **
>
> **3.       **The presenter stated that the court said the 1976 Copyright
> Guidelines are not legally binding for standards of fair use!****
>
> ** **
>
> **4.       **The presenter stated that using the same material (journal
> article, book chapters, etc.) for several consecutive semesters on reserves
> is ok and falls into fair use!****
>
> ** **
>
> I’ve learned that one cannot change the format of videos without the
> copyright holder permission. The only exception according to DMCA would be
> short excerpts not the whole programs. Also, I have learned that if I
> accept or sign a contract with the publisher, I have to abide to its
> contents.****
>
> ** **
>
> Thanks,****
>
> ** **
>
> Farhad Moshiri****
>
> Audiovisual Librarian****
>
> University of the Incarnate Word****
>
> San Antonio, TX  ****
>
> ** **
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VIDEOLIB is intended to encourage the broad and lively discussion of issues 
relating to the selection, evaluation, acquisition,bibliographic control, 
preservation, and use of current and evolving video formats in libraries and 
related institutions. It is hoped that the list will serve as an effective 
working tool for video librarians, as well as a channel of communication 
between libraries,educational institutions, and video producers and 
distributors.

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