[1]EU Screws Up Copyright Ruling on Student's Presentation:

    It would seem obvious to me that educational use should be a valid
    exception from copyright law. After all, copyright exists for the
    benefit of society, and educating the next generation is to our
    collective benefit.

    The concept of fair use is clearly established in US copyright law,
    and in fact Germany [2]has a similar law. Furthermore, the [3]EU
    copyright directive states that EU members can pass laws granting a
    copyright exception for education purposes.

    But this court went against both common sense and existing policies
    to rule that because the student's presentation was posted online,
    the copyright was infringed.

    That is a terrible ruling, with a frankly nonsensical justification.
    It is based on the assumption that putting the photo online was a
    unique and special thing, when in fact everything is put online
    these days. It is 2018, and I am surprised the school hadn't
    required the kid to put the presentation on Slideshare, Google Docs
    or some other online service because they wanted to the student to
    learn how to use the online tools.

    The fact the court can't see that is evidence of just how out of
    date they are and how little they know about modern times.

  (Via [4]The Digital Reader)
  Also on:

  [5]Twitter
    __________________________________________________________________

  My original entry is here: [6]EU Screws Up Copyright Ruling on
  Student's Presentation. It posted Sun, 12 Aug 2018 14:47:53 +0000.
  Filed under: personal, tech,

References

  1. http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheDigitalReader/~3/0ykwXQlHkPk/
  2. https://www.communia-association.org/2018/02/14/edu-exception-germany/
  3. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copyright_Directive
  4. https://feeds.feedburner.com/TheDigitalReader
  5. https://twitter.com/TokyoGringo/status/1028655374759612416
  6. https://www.prjorgensen.com/?p=1451