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We do not offer or sell professional advice. We pride
ourselves in double checking and citing our sources, but,
at the same time we guarantee nothing
Use what you find here only as a guideline
in your own research.
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Copyright Basics
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A copyright is an exclusive right to reproduce a "work of authorship," to
prepare derivative works, to distribute copies of the work, to perform the work, and to publicly
display the work.
East Kentucky Genealogy, Kentucky
Surname Exchange, Kentucky Research Exchange, Kentucky's
Lost & Found
are all works created
by my own mind and research. Anything and everything complied
within these pages are copyrighted by me. Please do not
"steal" from me.
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U.S. Law
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In the U.S., copyright laws derive from the U.S. Constitution which gave
Congress the power "to promote science ... by securing for limited times to authors ... the
exclusive right to their ... writings."
(Art. 1, sec. 8)
Federal
legislation preempts state laws on the subject of copyright. Copyright statutes are found in
Title 17 of the United States Code, whose last major revision was called the Copyright Act of
1976.
"Original" means both originating with the author, not derived from another
source, and
novel or new, not previously known or expressed.
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Ownership of copyright
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Ownership of the copyright is distinct from the ownership of any material
object in which the work is embedded. Mere possession of a
book, or a CD-ROM, does not give the possessor absolute right to do anything they please with the
contents of the book or CD-ROM.
Newly created works are protected during the author's lifetime and an
additional fifty years thereafter. (Congress is considering a provision to add 20 years to this
limit.) Works created before 1978 are governed by the law then in effect, generally for a total
term of 75 years. In general, any work published before 1922 is now in the public domain.
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Genealogy, Copyright
and You
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The copyright laws affect both the research and the publication of your
genealogy, either a narrative family history or a simple pedigree family line. First, though,
consider that the basic facts about your ancestor's life (such as name, birth date and place,
marriage partner, date and place, and death date and place) do not receive copyright protection,
no matter their source. Whether you went to the county courthouse, rented a microfilm of the
relevant records, or found the data in a commercial CD-ROM, the basic facts of a person's life may
be freely copied; they
are in the public domain.
But adding any kind of narration to these basic facts gives rise to a copyright in the creative
portion of the work. The more narrative, the stronger the copyright. If you are the author, you
should take care to mark your work to give the proper notice. If it is a large or major work,
consider registering it and depositing a copy in the Library of Congress.
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Thank you for taking
the time to read this,
Diane Montgomery Parsons
Joan
Ball Williams
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