Fair use
Additionally, the fair use defense to copyright infringement was codified for the first time in section
107 of the 1976 Act. Fair use was not a novel proposition in 1976, however, as federal courts had been using a common law
form of the doctrine since the 1840s (an English version of fair use appeared much earlier). The Act codified this common
law doctrine with little modification. Under section 107, the fair use of a copyrighted work is not copyright infringement,
even if such use technically violates section 106. While fair use explicitly applies to use of copyrighted
work for criticism, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, or research purposes, the defense is
not limited to these areas. The Act gives four factors to be considered to determine whether a particular use is a
fair use:
the purpose and character of the use (commercial or educational, transformative or reproductive);
the nature of the copyrighted work (fictional or factual, the degree of creativity); the amount and
substantiality of the portion of the original work used; and the effect of the use upon the market (or
potential market) for the original work.[4]
The Act was later amended to extend the fair use defense to unpublished works.
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