Color Graphich Without Text
Copyright Crash Course with Link to Copyright Crash Course

"Just Sign It and Send It Back"

And Why Not?

Full Text Available

horizontal rule

Georgia Harper

Office of General Counsel
University of Texas System


horizontal rule

JUST SIGN IT AND SEND IT BACK:
The Good Old Days

Things have changed!

horizontal rule

What Could Be So Bad?

Take a peek at a couple - you are likely to be unpleasantly surprised!

Sometimes vendor restrictions are justifiable: without certain protections, they could not furnish materials at all. But, in some cases, shifting responsibility and risk of loss to the library is entirely inappropriate. You have to read and think about each contract to decide what stays in, what changes and what goes.

horizontal rule

What Difference Will It Make?

We are involved in an important process: standard-setting

This means that we really must get reasonable terms into as many contracts as possible. The evolving standards must include contract clauses that accommodate libraries' needs.

For substantive revisions, focus on patrons' needs and library's capabilities:

For liability and other legal revisions, develop standard clauses or standard approaches to editing vendor clauses:

Centralize contract review to develop expertise and consistency. Communicate with other libraries about licensing. The faster we all get involved, the quicker we will create reasonable standards.

horizontal rule

Nobody Enforces These, Do They?

The Backdrop

The Role of Contracts in the World of Copyright

Consider the controversy surrounding the scope of fair use for personal research and study:

In other words, the vendor and customer may not agree on what fair use means, but they can agree on what patrons may do with licensed materials.

High Risk Contract Clauses

Some clauses are worse than confusing - they literally put the library in harm's way. Look out for clauses that require the library to:

Just focus on your patrons' needs, what the library can realistically do to accommodate the vendor's need for control, and DO NOT agree to indemnify a vendor for any harm that results from patron wrongdoing! Line it out.

Living With Your Contract

Once the library has agreed to something, it must honor its commitment.

In Summary

You will reduce your risk of legal consequences if you strive for clarity, avoid the deadly liability clauses and help those who must live with the contract to understand and abide by its reasonable restrictions.

horizontal rule

Hang On: There's Online Help!

horizontal rule

Top | Search
Copyright in the Library: Section 108f Contractual Obligations | Copyright in Library: Acquisiton Under Contract
Other Presentations | Crash Course in Copyright | Intellectual Property Section | Office of General Counsel

horizontal rule

Comments to Intellectual Property
intellectualproperty@utsystem.edu
Last updated: August 25, 2001

horizontal rule