I'm not so sure that the law is quite that straightforward. You certainly own the copyright, but I'm not sure what impact the concept of fair use has in this situation. The law on fair use is horribly vague. The Copyright Act of 1976 gave four guidelines for assessing fair use:
the copyright act of 1976 has been altered greatly especially the coverage of photos.. are you referencing the section on photos or on printed literary works, the factual or fictional leadss me to belief it's written works not photos...
(From the
Wikipedia)
1) the purpose and character of the use (commercial or educational, transformative or reproductive);
The personal scrapbook use would clearly not be commercial
2) the nature of the copyrighted work (fictional or factual, the degree of creativity);
I suppose this would depend on the picture
3) the amount and substantiality of the portion of the original work used; and
I'm not really sure how this would apply
4) the effect of the use upon the market (or potential market) for the original work.
This is the most significant part of a fair use claim (from what I understand) and in this case it would favor the concept of fair use.
From what I could gather looking at sites on fair use, it would almost certainly be OK to use a non-commercial photograph in a non-commercail education presentation without permission. However, every school made it clear that a good faith effort should be made to secure permission and provide some attribution.
there is a big difference between an educational setting and a message board...
The concept gets even more confusing if we switch from a physical scrapbook to a virtual one. What if in stead of printing the photo the user simply embedded it in the page via a link? The effect is the almost the same. Does that affect the situation? What if instead of putting the photo in an <IMG> tag, they just used an <HREF> and required you to jump to it?
people have already been prosecuted for the use of copyrighted photos on the internet...
What if the person got permission from Werner Technologies (our gracious hosts)? When we post photos here, how much control over how they are used to do we give to Werner Technologies?
that isn't really part of the discussion, if we give werner full usage rights, that doesn't give any usage rights to members of the boards...
Personally, I like the idea of asking permission. Still, I think saying that someone that prints a photo from the web is stealing is quite excessive.
the law fairly defines stealing as the taking of someone elses property without their permission, so no matter how someone chooses to sugarcoat it, it is in fact stealing I remember cutting pictures from magazines and glueing them into stories when I was a kid. I harbor no feelings of guilt.