Saturday, October 31, 2009

Assume our class wants to make a video yearbook and sell coppies to classmates, what do we need to do legally?

Can we just put the music to the video? Or do we have to contact the artist or anything else?
Answers:
You are free to copyright and sell any original content. Any content copied from any owned source, including published music, commercial video, even trade marks and logos of companies, can be used only by written permission of the owner. School plays, concert music with paid admissions, CDs made of copies of other works, all are subject to license. For charity, public school benefit, and some religious organization uses, it is customary for owners to grant free written use licenses for the material. Do your homework, get permission to use every piece of intellectual property you copy, and while you are at it, copyright all the original material for the school.
All you need to do is video tape around school or whatever shots you want to take and then you pick out the music that you want and send it to the company that makes your yearbooks and tell them the special effects or whatever else you want added to it and you should recieve it by the end of the year.
I think you just sell on your classmate right? just take video, attach a songs, burn cd and sell the copies. Nothing matter maybe because yous ell on your own community. Not big issue

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