Fair Use definition

Fair Use means students may use portions of lawfully acquired copyrighted works in their academic multimedia projects, with proper credit and citations. They may retain them as examples of their academic work.
Fair Use means use that does not interfere with the normal exploitation of the work or unreasonably prejudice the legitimate interests of the author;
Fair Use means use by the Subscriber or an Authorized User (a) conforming to Sections 107 and 108 of the Copyright Revision Xxx 0000 as those provisions have been amended and may be amended from time to time, or (b) conforming to the guidelines developed by the National Commission on New Technological Uses of Copyrighted Works (“CONTU Guidelines”).

Examples of Fair Use in a sentence

  • Fair Use" for the purpose of the XXXX means to, in full or in parts, Use the Licensed Offerings to input, process, assess, analyze, edit, output and deliver data on the number of Devices, for the duration (the "Term") and according to the modalities expressly indicated in the specifications set out in Your Order and in the Documentation.


More Definitions of Fair Use

Fair Use for the purpose of the XXXX means to, in full or in parts, Use the Licensed Offerings to input, process, assess, analyze, edit, output and deliver data on the number of Devices, for the duration (the "Term") and according to the modalities expressly indicated in the specifications set out in Your Order and in the Documentation.
Fair Use means the prohibition of unnecessary and wasteful misuse of Benefits.
Fair Use means the combined number of outbound minutes plus local inbound minutes does not substantially exceed the average use of all other Voice Telco Services customers as measured on a per user basis. Usage and associated charges for excess usage will be determined based solely upon Voice Telco Services’ collected usage information. Fair Use also prohibits any activities that result in excessive usage including, but not limited to, auto dialing, continuous or extensive call forwarding, telemarketing, fax broadcasting, fax blasting or transmitting broadcasts or recorded messages, or any activity that disrupts the activities of Voice Telco Services and other Voice Telco Services customers.
Fair Use means that (i) with respect to calling plans, the combined number of outbound minutes plus local inbound minutes or (ii) with respect to messaging plans, the combined number of outbound messages plus inbound messages, in either case does not substantially exceed, in Company’s reasonable judgment, the average use of all other Company customers as measured on a per Contact Center agent basis. Usage and associated charges for excess usage will be determined based solely upon Company’s collected usage information. Fair Use also prohibits any activities that result in excessive usage including, but not limited to, auto-dialing, predictive outbound dialing, continuous or extensive call forwarding, telemarketing, fax broadcasting, fax blasting, or transmitting broadcast messages, or any activity that disrupts the activities of Company and/or other Company customers; provided that, for purposes of clarification, this sentence does not prohibit the use of Company’s appointment reminder service.
Fair Use is the doctrine that allows one to quote very brief excerpts from a work to use for parody, criticism or comment. So, for example, I would probably be entitled to quote a few sentences – maybe even a short paragraph or two – from that Houston Chronicle article for purposes of comment or criticism. (And there is no mathematical formula for determining how much of a copyrighted work one can quote and still be protected by the fair use doctrine, so we won’t play the game of “how many pages or paragraphs can I copy before it isn’t fair use?”) Therefore, in light of the very strict law of copyright, and in light of the very substantial penalties for infringement – even unintentional infringement and even if the copies are free – IFMA cannot allow instructors to use “other resources” in these courses unless such resources fall into one of the four categories I have listed above. An instructor may hand out a bibliography; an instructor could tell his class: In addition to the course materials, I want you to go to the bookstore and buy a copy of Xxxx on “The Greening of America” or go pick up a copy of today’s New York Times because there’s an article in there I want to discuss in class; or go buy last week’s issue of Science magazine. He could also tell his class to rent a video and watch it (but not bring the video to class where everyone watches it). But I can’t photocopy pages or chapters from the book or photocopy articles from the paper or magazine and hand them out in class. Attachment E
Fair Use concept in copyright law means anyone may freely publish anything obtained from any online source. False
Fair Use means that the total amount of aggregated archiving content stored by a particular customer’s account under the Legal Hold Feature (measured in terms of total GB of storage) does not substantially exceed, in Company’s reasonable judgment, the average total amount of storage of all other customers of the Services, as measured on a per user basis. Usage and associated charges for excess usage will be determined based solely upon Company’s collected usage information. Fair Use also prohibits any activities that result, directly or indirectly, in excessive usage of the Legal Hold Feature or any activity that disrupts the activities of Company and/or other Company customers.