Who Owns Your Class Notes? Cal State Threatens Students Who Sell Their Notes
from the who-owns-your-mind dept
SongLifter points us to the news that the California State University system has sent a cease-and-desist letter to the site NoteUtopia, for enabling students to buy and sell various class notes (among other things). On top of that, it has sent emails to students at its universities, warning them that using a site like NoteUtopia can result in discipline -- including expulsion. There is, in fact, a provision California State education code that prohibits preparing, selling, transferring, distributing or publishing notes or recordings of lectures for "any commercial purpose."Now, I'm sure some will defend this as either (1) a way to stop cheating or (2) because of the supposed, if ambiguously explained "evils" of "commercial use," but it does seem a bit troubling to threaten the website itself for this, or to tell students that they cannot sell their own notes. The threat of "cheating," via others' notes has always seemed overblown to me. You still need to actually learn the material to pass the class, and if you can learn it better via the notes of others, more power to you. I would guess that it's actually harder to do things that way since the very act of note taking is what helps many people learn in the first place. As for the commercial use issue, again, I'm sort of at a loss for why this matters? If there really is a market for notes, then what, exactly, is the problem?
In the end, I'm just left scratching my head in wondering why the university system should care about this at all, when in most cases, all this will do is provide another source of information for students who wish to learn something.
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Filed Under: cal state, california, class notes, commercial use, education
Companies: noteutopia
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Logical much?
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Re: Logical much?
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And yet, the school PAYS ME to take notes...
I'm a notetaker for Disability Services on campus, which means that for every class I take notes for (caveat: I have to be taking the exact same class as the student who needs the notes), I get paid $100 (plus an extra $25 for delivering typed notes) for the semester. $125 divvied by 30-45 classes worth of notes == not much, but still a slightly better take than NoteUtopia.
So, if it's not just legal, but ENCOURAGED to take notes for profit through my school's system, why would it become suddenly unacceptable for me to sell those notes to folks who are also willing to compensate me for my time taking notes?
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Re: And yet, the school PAYS ME to take notes...
/sarcasm
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Note taking
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Notes vs. Books
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How else do you expect us to convince people that our courses are actually useful to people?
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cliff's notes anyone?
how about copyright on the notes?
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I find this generally interesting. Did this law come into effect before the internet, or after?
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So, in California it's unlawful to prepare, give, sell, or publish for a commercial purpose any contemporaneous recording of a classroom "academic presentation" IF the presentation is not "fixed in a tangible medium of expression."
In short, if the instructor wings it and his lecture is not written down anywhere then students cannot give away or sell the notes they take of that lecture. The rationale is that the professor owns a "common law" copyright in the lecture material [common law because federal copyright law does not apply when a work is not "fixed in a tangible medium of expression."]
But if the instructor has written down the lecture [or some substantial part of it] then I think it probable that this California state law DOES NOT APPLY and, therefore, does not even speak to the question of whether students can lawfully give away or sell the notes they take. We have to look to federal copyright law.
The reason for the distinction is because federal copyright law applies to all creative works that exist in tangible form [in this case, written down]. State law can only apply to, and in this case protect, creative works that are unprotectable by copyright law [like lectures given on the fly].
How many professors lecture w/o writing their lectures down in some fashion? None. ALL professors work from at least their notes on the subject they're discussing. Even the older ones who no longer bring their notes to class anymore. Which, to me, means that the California law will NEVER apply [being preempted by the federal copyright law].
If federal copyright law applies then as soon as the professor writes down the content of his lecture copyright AUTOMATICALLY attaches to that literary work -- w/o any formalities [such as registering the copyright with the Copyright Office].
So ... once a professor's lecture is written down and then performed in class, the next issue is whether the students infringe that copyright by writing down their summaries of the professor's lecture.
Copyleftists may not like the answer but I think that the answer as the law stands now is yes. Research "derivative works" and the test used to determine whether a subsequent work is a derivative of an original.
Once you conclude that the students' notes are infringing derivative works the next issue is whether the students have some defense or justification for their infringement. The answer to that is, I think, also yes -- specifically, by the custom in academia and by professor acquiescence the student has an implied license to summarize the professor's lecture as it's being performed.
But I think that license only authorizes the students to use their summaries for OWN personal use. Making copies is outside the license as is selling the original copy of their notes.
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Can I sneek a peek at my notes whilst solving a work related issue?
I'd better be safe ... time to burn those notes before I get raided.
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Even if the California law did apply, it only applies in California. If I upload notes to some server in Belize, California can do nothing about it, even though the server is available to anyone with a computer in California.
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Wait a sec, California STATE?
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Interesting.
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I'm not saying that all large lectures fit this model - just those for which the instructor adds little value.
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Just those for which the instructor adds little value
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Work for hire?
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From the Teachers POV
I am a college professor and have taught graduate and undergrad courses for almost 30 years.
Early in my teaching career I would give the students open-book, open-notes exams, in part because I felt it emulate the real-world environment.
During one exam I saw a student rifiling through a stack of paper - "his" "notes". "His" "notes" consisted of every exam I had given over the past 2 years at that school. Creating good exam questions are tough, and while none of my exams were the same, some of the questions were similar enough that I felt that these notes (at the time only available via the frat houses), gave this student an unfair advantage.
Rather than fight it, I simply redsigned my exams and changed by policy to closed-book, closed-notes. And without those "notes" the student failed the class (which, by the way, I take no joy in).
"Cheating" (and there are various way to define it) in school is getting out of hand, and in many ways it has been an uphill battle for teachers. And we can't/won't catch it all. But we need to try.
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Re: From the Teachers POV
Notes don't give students answers. They just give them focus on the subject at hand, and remind them of things they need to answer or study.
I could give away my philosophy notes to everyone, everywhere, and they still wouldn't know philosophy. They would, however, have a pretty good starting point for learning which issues that philosophy tackles. And that's not a bad thing, nor something any university should discourage.
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Re: Re: From the Teachers POV
You could try to say how the professor's work is being exploited, but professors aren't paid for their notes. They're tenured, so they have nothing to lose, financially speaking.
This is not a case where commercial use exploits anyone, so it's hard to see how it shouldn't be allowed.
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Re: Re: From the Teachers POV
Notes I don't have to much of a problem with "class notes, study guides, handouts" - but it's the "reports, quizzes and more" that have me concerned.
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Re: From the Teachers POV
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Though the thoughts of why there doing it is far more troubling. Any good detective ask this first, "Who has the most to gain from this???"
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And how about free speech?
This really is a stupid mess we're in.
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> profit websites, and now some of the teachers are trying to hunt them
> down
All these laws and lawsuits will do is send these class notes businesses to overseas servers where US law doesn't apply. There are several 3rd-world countries doing a bang-up business as data havens where they've set up their laws to shield people from process servers and civil lawsuits from other countries. Unless the US wants to start blocking access to entire countries (a censorship move that wouldn't survive the first round of court challenges), there's really nothing that can be done about it.
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What a mess, and so stupid
So what we are saying is that in essence restricting culture, and learning is ok, hold on is that what copyright …..
Cheating is one thing and I certainly do not agree with unfair advantages in learning for notes well that as fair as I’m concerned is a right. How can copyright infringement exist for learning? Pretty much defines nearly every dissention as infringement as they are all based in some form from reference material. You get the picture!
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The way it can still be
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I think it is funny that the majority of comments here focus on the technical legal issues instead of what this whole story is about.
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Being a lazy bum is a personal decision
I agree with that sentiment, but once someone decides on taking and paying for a university education, they should also be prepared take any responsibilities related to that. At a university, the days of coddling students and looking over their shoulders are over.
Once the teacher has made their effort to teach and share what they intended to share, it's up to the student what to do with it. It's the student who gets to choose if they make the best of it and progress and grow, or if they don't.
It's pretty plain to see why people are focusing on the legal issues. Because the story of lazy students looking for a way to skate by on their classes and not learn a thing is old hat, and more importantly, a personal choice. On the other hand, universities acting like they have a monopoly on sharing classroom knowledge for any reason, and at any level, even as trivial as class notes, is a concern.
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i would disagree, i dont take notes at all and i still get by in hs w/ C`s and B`s
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huh???
c)It does not constitute a violation of this chapter for a
business, agency, or person solely to provide access or connection to or from a facility, system, or network over which that business,agency, or person has no control, including related capabilities that are incidental to providing access or connection. This subdivision does not apply to a business or agency that is owned by, or to a business, agency, or person that is controlled by, or a conspirator with, a business, agency, or person actively involved in the creation, editing, or knowing distribution of a contemporaneous recording that violates this chapter
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I could see a school punishing (flunking?) a student for buying the notes, but I think its wrong to cut out the supply.
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but wait....
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