Uploaded by langemedia on Jan 23, 2012
For all of you documentarians out there, you're going to have to take close attention to what you can and cannot use for your project. Fair Use is the cause that grants video editors access to movies and television. Copyright law allows a person the exclusive right to control the distribution and sale of his or her creation. This is to encourage the creation of new works of art, an invention and add value to society. However, there are specific exemptions to that exclusivity. It allow others to right a copy or distribute pieces of another person's work under copyright law called Fair Use. Fair Use allows users to copy portions of a work in a review for purposes of illustration or comment or to quote short passages in a scholarly or technical work in order to illustrate or clarify the user's observations. Journalists may also quote speeches to articles. They may transfer images or sound associated with the work in or near a news making event. Libraries may reproduce portions of a book to replace missing or damaged pages and teachers or students may print small parts of a book or essay to illustrate a lesson. Parody is also Fair Use. For movie makers, the issues of Fair Use most often involved the addition of music to a video, reproduction of video images for other films and towards the use of dialogue from other works. Courts consider imbalance four factors in determining the fine line between Fair Use and copyright infringement. For years, Fair Use is not been a copyright proposition, while someone thinks that Fair Use is often opposed by the copyright holder. A good place to get information about Fair Use specifically for documentary filmmakers is that the American Universities Center for Social Media. Probably, the safest solution for using other people's work in your creation is to make sure that you only use items who by choice or by copyright expiring is in the public domain. A good conservative role of thumb is that you should assume that the work is protected by copyright if it has been created after 1922, as all works created before that are now in the public domain. For example, although photographs, paintings, books, and sheet music are available for use without permission by the author, copyright law protects the musical performance recorded after 1922 even if the score was composed before 1922. You can contact the US Copyright Office to find the register material. Copyright office personnel can conduct the search for a modest fee. Every state or province has its own film commission or equivalent. Many situations require permission from every—host of overlapping authorities. In the case of larger cities, you may have to obtain permits from a Mayor's Office, the County's Executive Office, the Police Department, the Public Works Department and/or their transit authority. Certain jurisdictions may grant permits only upon proof that you have purchased suitable liability insurance to protect yourself and the government agencies in-charge of the property. As a first step, find out if insurance is a requirement then ask your insurance agent how to secure a short term insurance protection. The best advice is to attempt to get as much information and written policies, procedures and forms by telephone or mail well in advance to your schedule of shoot. Permit fees can vary to being entirely free to thousands of thousands of dollars depending upon the length and time of the shoot, the purpose of the video, the time of day and the property owner or granting authority. In general, you won't need to make royalty payments except occasionally to professional performers. Remember, everything is negotiable. Sometimes a property owner will be flattered to be represented in a video in which case a copy of the file of video will be used sufficient compensation. Perhaps, the best solution to the sound track problem is to comprise original music or have it compose for you. Local colleges often have students majoring in music. These students maybe interested in working with you as long as they receive credit for their compositions. Be sure that you have a written agreement with them however, so that you will have the rights to their work. Creating a documentary involves a unique ability to be able to tell a story, and when telling those stories being able to retain the realism in what it is you're capturing.
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