A service of the Telecommunication and Film Department, the College of Communication and Information Sciences, at the University of Alabama.

Related sites:
CineMetrics
TVCrit.com
ScreenSite

Related Software:
VLC Media Player
Gallery 2

Copyright & Fair Use

The images from television programs and films on Shot Logger are used for critical, teaching, and scholarship purposes. It is our understanding of Section 107 "Limitations on Exclusive Rights: Fair Use" of U.S. copyright law that these purposes constitute "fair use" of copyrighted material.

We believe that our use of television and film images passes the "Four Factor Fair Use Test" that encapsulates the main provisions of Section 107. Moreover, we believe that the arguments made in favor of fair use in Kristin Thompson's "Fair Usage Publication of Film Stills" and the Society for Cinema and Media Studies' "Best Practices For Fair Use in Teaching" should also apply here.

However, we do not wish to infringe upon any copyrights. If you are a copyright holder and you believe our use of an image infringes upon your copyright, please notify us and we will immediately remove that image from Shot Logger.

Process for Notification of Claimed Infringement

As per the Digital Millennium Copyright Act of 1998 (512(c)(3)(A)(i-vi)):


For purposes of notification, the designated agent is:

Jeremy Butler
Professor
Telecommunication and Film Department
The University of Alabama
Box 870152
Tuscaloosa, AL 35487

Use of Shot Logger Materials and Data

Creative Commons License

Shot Logger is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 United States License.

No data, text, images, or video/sound on Shot Logger may be reproduced for commercial purposes. However, educational and other non-commercial uses are permitted, if proper attribution is given. Please see the Creative Commons License for details.

Aside from stills taken from TV programs and films, all Shot Logger materials and data are copyright ©2007-2012 by Jeremy G. Butler.

Shot Logger Source Code

Shot Logger relies upon an open-source projects: the Videolan VLC media player. In keeping with the licensing of this project, Shot Logger's source code -- primitive though it may be -- will also be made available as open source.