A district court ruled that libraries that provided a search engine company (Google) with books to scan were protected by fair use when the libraries later used the resulting digital scans for three purposes: preservation, a full-text search engine, and electronic access for disabled patrons who could not read the print versions. Important factors: On remand, the second factor (the scholarly nature of the work) and the fourth factor (impact of the use on the market value) weighed in favor of fair use. The case was remanded to the district court which, in 2016, found the majority of instances to be fair use. On appeal, the Eleventh Circuit rejected the 10% standard and emphasized the importance of a flexible case-by-case fair use analysis. In a case alleging 75 instances of infringement in an educational setting, a district court, proposing a fair use standard based on less than 10% of a book, determined that 70 instances were not infringing. Important factors: No more than 1% of Wright’s unpublished letters were copied and the purpose was informational. A biographer of Richard Wright quoted from six unpublished letters and ten unpublished journal entries by Wright. Falwell’s copying did not diminish the sales of the magazine (since it was already off the market) and would not adversely affect the marketability of back issues. Falwell made several hundred thousand copies of the page and distributed them as part of a fund-raising effort. Publisher Larry Flynt made disparaging statements about the Reverend Jerry Falwell on one page of Hustler magazine. 3.0.1 Consider Fair Use Before Requesting DMCA Takedown.2 Artwork, Visual Arts, and Audiovisual Cases.
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