Welcome, guest ( Login )

Restricted » Book » Footnotes » Ch10Part10Footnote9

Ch10Part10Footnote9

Version 1, changed by s3admin. 03/15/2005.   Show version history

Chapter 10 Footnote 9


To add this foonote to the chapter:

1. Enter the number 9 into the edit page after the referenced text.



2. Highlight and then link that number to /Book/Chapter10/Ch10Part10/index.html#Ch10Part10Footnote9
3. Highlight the number again and click the superscript button.
4. Save

It should look like this: 9 .


See Michael G. Frey, “Unfairly Applying the Fair Use Doctrine: Princeton University Press v Michigan Document Services, 99 F3d 1381 (6th Cir 1996),” University of Cincinnati Law Review 66 (1998): 959, 1001; Frey asserts that “copyright protection exists primarily for the benefit of the public, not the benefit of individual authors. Copyright law does give authors a considerable benefit in terms of the monopolistic right to control their creations, but that right exists only to ensure the creation of new works. The fair use doctrine is an important safety valve that ensures that the benefit to individual authors does not outweigh the benefit to the public”; Marlin H. Smith (“The Limits of Copyright: Property, Parody, and the Public Domain,” Duke Law Journal 42 [1993]: 1233, 1272) asserts that “copyright law is better understood as that of a gatekeeper, controlling access to copyrighted works but guaranteeing, via fair use, some measure of availability to the public.”

Attachments (0)

  File By Size Attached Ver.