If you wish to seek permission to use copyrighted materials, you must identify and locate the
copyright holder. The process may require considerable time and patience. Getting permission is
not always difficult, however, and may have minimal cost depending on how you wish to use the
material. Sometimes a phone call is appropriate, although it is always wise to document
permissions in writing.
Identify the Rights Holder:
The most direct way to identify the rights holder is to examine a copy of the work for a copyright
notice, place and date of publication, author and publisher. If the work is a sound recording,
examine the disk, tape cartridge, or cassette in which the recorded sound is fixed, or the
container.
The author is not always the rights holder. Rights may have been assigned to a publisher or be held by an estate. Different rights may have been assigned to different parties. The first publication, second edition, film or television rights might all be held separately.
See How to Investigate the Copyright Status of a Work for more detail. US Copyright Office Circular 22: How to Investigate the Copyright
Status of a Work ![]()
Proceeding without Current Contact Information (e.g. the publisher is out of business or
the author is deceased)
The U.S. Copyright Office has recognized this problem and refers to such works as "orphan works."
Work is being done to create an exemption in the law that would encourage uses of such works by
mitigating the liability risk. At the present time, however, educators and libraries must make
individual decisions concerning their use of such works, including evaluating the risk of
liability. Those who proceed with their use should document and preserve their efforts to locate
the copyright holder.
Fair Use in Lieu of Permission
Previous payment of a fee or even outright denial of permission does not preclude you from
exercising your rights under the Copyright Act. You can still employ an appropriate specific
provision or the fair use provision and there is no presumption against you for having asked
permission.
No Response to Permission Request
Lack of response does not translate into a passive grant of permission to use. If your proposed
use exceeds all provisions of the law, including fair use, you probably need to use a link to the
work, find another work to use, or modify your proposed use to fit within fair use.