For help in making a fair use evaluation, please see the "Fair Use Checklist" to the right. Another excellent resource to use is the ALA's Fair Use Evaluator.
Below is a checklist that will help you determine whether your use of a work might be protected under the concept of fair use. This checklist will provide you with a record of your decision-making process. It is recommended that the completed checklist be retained as evidence of your fair use analysis. It should be noted that Section 504 (c)(2) of the Copyright Act of 1976 offers legal protection to educators and librarians who have used copyrighted material based upon a good-faith analysis of the fair use factors.
I. What is the purpose of the use?
Favors fair use
[ ] Educational use
[ ] Not-for-profit use
[ ] Transformative use
[ ] Parody
Does not favor fair use
[ ] Commercial use
[ ] For-profit use
[ ] Non-transformative use, verbatim copy
II. What is the nature of the copyrighted work?
Favors fair use
[ ] Factual or non-fiction content
[ ] Published work
Does not favor fair use
[ ] Creative or artistic content
[ ] Consumable work (e.g. textbooks)
[ ] Unpublished work
III. What is the amount or substantiality of the item used?
Favors fair use
[ ] Small quantity being used
[ ] Portion is not ‘heart of the work’
[ ] Amount used is appropriate for educational purposes
Does not favor fair use
[ ] Large quantity or entire work being used
[ ] Portion used is ‘heart of the work’
[ ] Amount used is more than is necessary for educational purposes
IV. What effect will the use have on the potential market for the work?
Favors fair use
[ ] No significant effect on market or potential market for the work
[ ] Single or limited number of copies made
[ ] Access limited to small group (e.g. a class)
[ ] One-time and/or spontaneous use
Does not favor fair use
[ ] Copying will replace purchase of work
[ ] Wide distribution of multiple copies
[ ] Made publicly available or access unrestricted
[ ] Repeated or long-term use
Adapted from Central Michigan University's Copyright Web Guide, Cornell University’s Checklist for Conducting a Fair Use Analysis Before Using Copyrighted Materials, and North Carolina State University’s Fair Use Checklist.
Under the “fair use” rule of copyright law, a person may make limited use of another author’s work without asking permission. As noted in the Fair Use Checklist box:
"There's no one right answer as to what constitutes a 'fair use' of a particular copyrighted work. The answer varies from situation to situation."
Here are some suggested guidelines for both photocopying and ECN at Walsh University:
Print Materials:
Distributing Copies
Using Materials Found on the Internet
Using Multimedia
Multimedia works are created by combining copyrighted elements such as movies, music, sounds, graphics, and text. It is recommended that you use only small portions of other people's works.
Suggested limits:
CONFU Recommendations allow you to use small portions of multimedia works without obtaining copyright permissions.