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Investigating Alleged
Copyright Infringement

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University should respond quickly to any complaint that a work residing on one of its servers infringes copyright, acknowledging receipt of the complaint, indicating that it plans to investigate and requesting further information, if needed. University should immediately notify its legal department and the author/owner of the allegedly infringing work and begin to investigate the complaint.

The investigator will likely need to do all of the following:

University, in coordination with legal counsel, will make a good faith determination whether to remove the allegedly infringing  material. A decision not to remove material should represent University's and its legal counsel's reasonable belief that the complaint is without sufficient foundation, or if well-founded, that a legal defense or exemption may apply, such as fair use. University should document its investigation and decision and write a detailed response to the person alleging infringement explaining the action(s) that have or have not been taken and their basis.

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Sample Response Letter

[Complainant]
[Address]

Dear [Complainant]:

We received your [letter] dated [date] alleging that a work [identify how the work relates to University equipment and functions, for example, "residing on a University server"] infringes a work in which you hold copyright. As the University takes such matters very seriously, we will investigate your allegation and respond appropriately.

It will aid our investigation if you could provide the following: [list any factual items University needs to conclude whether there is unexcused infringement.]

We appreciate your bringing this to our attention.

[Closing signature]

 

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Crash Course in Copyright | Intellectual Property Section | Office of General Counsel

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Comments to Intellectual Property
intellectualproperty@utsystem.edu
Last updated: August 22, 2001

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