Tuesday, March 4, 2014

Rules of Netiquette and The Use of Clip Art - What is Legal - via Netiquette IQ


All of us who use clip art can be confused with what is public domain, "free" or "royalty free". Many assume they can download any image simply because it is on the Internet. I have often been unclear if I need to pay for the use of certain photo or videos. When I came across the article below, I immediately wanted to share it with my readers to clear the haze about what the terms are and what is legal in terms of usage. Hopefully this will enable all who read this article to show the proper Netiquette!



Clip Art - When It‘s Illegal
By Jared Page
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It's a dilemma that small business owners face daily. Where do you find quality clip art images licensed for business use? How can you tell if an image is legal to use in a given situation? Which laws apply to which clip art images?
First, a definition of clip art is in order. The words "clip art" can classify a wide variety of files—professional photographs, technical illustrations, simple line drawings, even fonts. However, some define clip art only as scalable vector illustrations. Others may define clip art as any image used on a computer.
The definition of clip art is flexible, but US copyright laws apply to all image types equally—the right of legal use depends on the intent of the copyright owner.
Professional graphic designers must draw the line between clip art that's legit and clip art that can cause legal troubles. Below are the common legal categories and definitions for clip art images that graphic designers use every day.
Free Clip Art
There are plenty of free clip art websites online. Most offer hundreds of basic images in low-resolution formats. (For more on clip art resolution formats, read Understanding Image Formats.) Free images are fine for personal use—such as scrapbooking-but unless you know the original source and the website owner's motive for giving clip art away free, you risk downloading unlabeled, copyrighted images inadvertently. (You may also leave your computer vulnerable to uninvited guests, like spyware.)
Legal business use for free clip art images isn't easy to pinpoint since the original source is obscure, so free clip art images aren't recommended for business use.
Published Clip Art
Published clip art categorizes every image you see online or in print. Sometimes it's difficult to find the source of these images, but if you want to use the image commercially, you must receive permission.
Contact the webmaster or publisher to learn the source of a given clip art image, then do your homework to find out if it's available for commercial use. If you can't track the image to its source, look elsewhere for clip art images with clear origins.
Copyrighted Clip Art—Limited Legal Use
Some copyrighted clip art is not open to any public use. For example, you'd be hard pressed to get a legal image of Disney's Mickey Mouse for display on your commercial website unless you are a licensed reseller of Disney products. Legally, you can't even copy an image of a Disney character to make your own personal T-shirt.
Copyrighted, restricted clip art is off-limits for commercial use unless you have a written agreement with the copyright holder.
Royalty-Free Clip Art and Stock Images
The term “Stock Images”refers to full-page illustrations, typically with full-color backgrounds, or to photographs. Some see stock images as more category-specific and more expensive than clip art packages. The Internet is a popular source for royalty-free stock images; many websites act as trading posts for artists, photographers and designers. Photographers can post images for sale and designers can purchase the right to use images for a small fee, sometimes as little as $1 each.
"Royalty-Free Clip Art" is usually more object-oriented, often without backgrounds. Although there isn't a clear dividing line between clip art and stock images, legal use for both image types is the same.
You may purchase royalty-free clip art and stock images on discs (or download) to use without restriction, commercially and privately—on business cards, websites, personal scrapbooks and projects. The only purpose you cannot use royalty-free images for is to start your own clip art business; you do not have the right to resell or lease the clip art to others.
Rights Protected or Rights Managed Clip Art
Occasionally a business may want a unique clip art image that no one else has used or seen. To purchase a "rights protected" image means you buy the right to use an image exclusively, for a specific purpose. The seller promises not to sell that image to anyone else for that purpose, so your rights to the image are "protected."
Of course, these images are far more expensive than royalty-free clip art—often costing thousands of US dollars for a single image. The price also varies depending on how, where, when and for what duration you plan to use the image. Deviating from your approved use plan would be a legal violation.
Editorial Use Clip Art
Editorial rights images are typically photos for news, sports, entertainment, and other public interest arenas. These images can be used editorially (and some can be used commercially) as rights protected images. Of course, publishing images for editorial use is less restrictive and less expensive than rights protected use.
You must receive permission from the copyright owner for the specific use you have planned. The cost for using the image will be based on where, when, how long and in what form you plan to publish the image, and for what purpose.
For Happy Endings
Before using clip art, make sure the image matches the use you have planned. 
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In addition to this blog, I have authored the premiere book on Netiquette, " Netiquette IQ - A comprehensive Guide to Improve, Enhance and Add Power to Your Email". You can view my profile, reviews of the book and content excerpts at:

 www.amazon.com/author/paulbabicki

 If you would like to listen to experts in all aspects of Netiquette and communication, try my radio show on BlogtalkRadio  and an online newsletter via paper.li.I have established Netiquette discussion groups with Linkedin and  Yahoo I am also a member of the International Business Etiquette and Protocol Group and Minding Manners among others. I regularly consult for the Gerson Lehrman Group, a worldwide network of subject matter experts and I have been contributing to the blogs Everything Email and emailmonday . My work has appeared in numerous publications and I have presented to groups such as The Breakfast Club of NJ and  PSG of Mercer County, NJ.

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