Metadata
Title
Copyright
Category
general
UUID
58aa9de0e348442d8471c3a265c1243d
Source URL
https://learninglab.rmit.edu.au/referencing/copyright/
Parent URL
https://learninglab.rmit.edu.au/
Crawl Time
2026-03-18T05:14:21+00:00
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Copyright

Source: https://learninglab.rmit.edu.au/referencing/copyright/ Parent: https://learninglab.rmit.edu.au/

While studying, you will use works written or created by others in your assignments, presentations and assessments. Many of those works will be protected by copyright law.

Copyright is the legal right of the creator to determine if and how their works can be used by others, and this includes the right to reproduce, distribute, display, and make adaptations. In Australia, certain forms of original expression in material form are automatically protected by copyright. These include:\

Icons, by RMIT, licensed under CC BY-NC 4.0

Understanding how you can use copyright protected material will save you time, and help you avoid potentially serious consequences during your studies at RMIT and beyond.

Knowing what material you can use and how to use it correctly, is an important aspect of academic integrity.

The Fair dealing provision for Research or study

The Fair dealing provision for Research or Study in the Australian Copyright Act enables students and researchers to rely on using a reasonable portion of a copyrighted work, such as 10% or one chapter of a book, for research or study.

For artistic works, videos, films, and sound recordings, there is no simple defined rule on the amount you can use. Instead, "reasonable" is key the key factor — reasonable in terms of the amount of works used and in terms of the nature of use.

The fair dealing provision is closed, which means:

Other key points to understand are:

Moral rights and the right of attribution

All uses of copyright works, including under the fair dealing provisions, must contain a credit statement or attribution referencing the creator/author of the work.

And remember, you should not falsely claim to be an author of a work you did not create.

For more information, visit the Referencing page.

Test your knowledge


Further resources

Related resources If you are looking for more information on related topics, you can visit these Learning Lab pages and other open education resources.

[### Copyright advice

Useful copyright information for students, including using text, images, film and music.](https://www.rmit.edu.au/library/study/copyright-advice)

[### An introduction to Copyright in Australia

General information about copyright in Australia.](https://www.copyright.org.au/browse/book/ACC-An-Introduction-to-Copyright-in-Australia-INFO010)


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