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Copyright Basics for Faculty

This guide provides information about using copyrighted materials in the online and face-to-face classroom. Disclaimer: This guide is intended to provide general information and does not constitute legal advice.

Peer to Peer Networks

From Washburn ITS:

FILE-SHARING OF COPYRIGHTED WORKS WITHOUT PERMISSION FROM THE COPYRIGHT OWNER IS A VIOLATION OF FEDERAL COPYRIGHT LAWS
 

Washburn University is providing the following notice regarding Copyright Infringement and Sanctions in compliance with the Higher Education Opportunity Act of 2008 (HEOA), a reauthorization of the Higher Education Act.

The copyright law of the United States (Title 17, United States Code) provides legal protection for authors of original works, including literary, dramatic, musical, artistic, and other intellection products. The copyright law also grants a copyright owner the exclusive right to, and authorize others to, reproduce copies of the work.

File-sharing software is often used to copy and download or distribute music, movies, games and software through the Internet.  Peer-to-peer (P2P) and file sharing programs, if installed and enabled on your computer, allow digital media to be downloaded or uploaded between your computer and any other computer that also has these programs installed and enabled, and is also connected to the Internet.

Copying and/or distributing copyrighted material without permission of the copyright owner may subject you to serious civil and criminal penalties.

 
  •     Criminal penalties for first-time offenders can be as high as five years in prison and  $250,000 in fines.
  •     Civil penalties can run into many thousands of dollars in damages and legal fees. The minimum penalty is $750 per song.
  •     The federal "No Electronic Theft Law" (NET Act) relates to digital recordings and provides similar consequences:
    • Criminal penalties can run up to 5 years in prison and/or $250,000 in fines, even if you didn’t do it for monetary or financial or commercial gain.
    • If you did expect something in return, even if it just involves swapping your files for someone else’s, as in MP3 trading, you can be sentenced to as much as 5 years in prison.
    • Regardless of whether you expected to profit, you could be liable in civil court for damages and lost profits of the copyright holder for up to $150,000 in statutory damages for each of their copyrighted works that you illegally copy or distribute.
Additionally, compliance with copyright law is a part of Washburn's Acceptable Use of Technology Resources policy, violations can result in penalties up to and including expulsion from school or termination of employment in addition to legal and civil penalties.
 

Please see the Q & A's below for information about file sharing programs.

Q . What is peer-to-peer file sharing?

A . File sharing is the process of making files available for other users to download and use.  Peer-to-peer (P2P) sharing is when individuals store files on their personal computers and enable their computers as servers so that others may download the files.

Q . Is peer-to-peer file sharing unlawful?

A . Peer-to-peer file sharing is not, itself, unlawful. However, it becomes unlawful when you share copyrighted content (e.g. music) and you are not the copyright holder. There are many legitimate and lawful uses of peer-to-peer networks. There are also unscrupulous and unlawful uses of those networks.  It is the responsibility of all University constituents who use peer-to-peer technology to do so lawfully.

Q . What is appropriate file sharing and what isn't?

A . Unless you are the copyright holder or have express permission to share someone else's copyrighted works, you are almost certainly violating someone's copyrights if you upload copyrighted works to the Internet to share via a peer-to-peer network.

While there are some circumstances in which unauthorized downloading may be lawful, downloading songs, movies, TV programs, or software instead of purchasing them is clearly unlawful. Unless you are the copyright holder or have express permission to download someone else's copyrighted works, you are highly likely to be violating someone's copyrights if you download copyrighted works via a peer-to-peer network.

Sharing or distributing copyrighted materials (music and movies) is a violation of federal copyright protection laws.   You may be doing this without realizing it if you use peer-to-peer software such as Aimster, Kazaa, Morpheus, Grokster, LimeWire, BearShare, BitTorrent, eDonkey, Freewire, Gnutella, and others.

If you have any questions regarding this advisory, you should contact the Information Security Officer at 670-2341; the General Counsel at 670-1712; and/or the Housing Director at 670-1065.