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May I make copies of a work to put online (e.g. within UAS Online)?

copies online UAS
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May I make copies of a work to put online (e.g. within UAS Online)?

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If you use UAS Online, Caucus, CD-ROMs, satellite broadcasts, or other technologies in teaching and would like to make online (digitized) copies of works available to your students, you may do so without obtaining prior permission of the copyright holder but only when certain conditions are met. The Technology, Education, and Copyright Harmonization Act (TEACH Act), which became law in October 2002, expanded the kinds of materials that can be used in distance education courses, including situations outside the face-to-face classroom where “mediated instructional activity” takes place. The TEACH Act also puts limitations on the ways in which works may be used: • Performances of nondramatic literary or musical works are allowed • Only “reasonable and limited portions” of other works may be used, similar to what would have been used in the face-to-face classroom under the ‘fair use’ provisions of the Copyright Act • Materials must be directly related to teaching course content and be lawf

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If you use UAS Online, Caucus, CD-ROMs, satellite broadcasts, or other technologies in teaching and would like to make online (digitized) copies of works available to your students, you may do so without obtaining prior permission of the copyright holder but only when certain conditions are met. The Technology, Education, and Copyright Harmonization Act (TEACH Act), which became law in October 2002, expanded the kinds of materials that can be used in distance education courses, including situations outside the face-to-face classroom where “mediated instructional activity” takes place. The TEACH Act also puts limitations on the ways in which works may be used: • Performances of nondramatic literary or musical works are allowed • Only “reasonable and limited portions” of other works may be used, similar to what would have been used in the face-to-face classroom under the ‘fair use’ provisions of the Copyright Act • Materials must be directly related to teaching course content and be lawf

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