Copyright issue and reusing information found on the web crops up
often. The following
information is as I
understand
it from professional advice (see references below)
and research, and not offered as professional advice. You should refer
to
the US Copyright Office for
specific information.
Intellectual property (ie writing, drawing,
composing - any method of creative presentation) is protected
automatically under the Copyright Laws of 1976
and 1978. Once material is placed in fixed form (including
but not limited to print, magnetic media, sound recording, and the
Internet).
It is not required to be published (that being defined as distributed
to the public). Registration with the US Copyright Office is not
required in order to be protected but may be
beneficial; it is very difficult to establish legal claims without it. Copyright on material is in
effect for the length of the author's life plus 70 years (in
most cases - see US Copyright Law). After
a copyright has expired the material is considered
to be in the "public domain" and no longer under protection in terms of
royalties or licenses (citation still applies). When you purchase copyrighted material (such as a book
or recording) you may use it for your personal enjoyment. You cannot
copy it (as in computer processes or handwritten), cut,
save, print, or photocopy/reproduce) and/or reuse or market it for
money, or under
any circumstances claim or imply it to be your own work or
creation. Using someone else's work
as your
own is plagerism and a prosecutable offense.
As stated by the US Copyright Office on its website,
"Acknowledging the source of the copyrighted material does not
substitute for obtaining permission.".
Reusing copyrighted material for other than personal use can involve permission, royalties or licenses. Copying and using the materials beyond personal use may (and usually does) require direct permission from the publisher or originator. When it is granted you include on your copies and use of the materials "such and such used with permission of the author" or equivalent. Some expanded copyright statements prohibit outright any further use of the material. On the other hand, authors may include a disclaimer on their work that copying for non-profit use is permitted. This happens often with matters of information for the public good, education or other some such worthy cause.
Copyrighted information being used on a limited bases for non-profit
education is generally considered "fair use" - for example, a page or a
section of a page of a book may be given has a handout in a non-profit
teaching situation, providing the source of the information is
acknowledged.
Further
confusing intellectual property issues is what falls under copyright
protection versus patent or trademark protection. See the U.S.
Copyright Office and the US Patent and
Trademark Office website for further definitions of intellectual
property and the clarifications of which protection applies to which
type of intellectual property.