> You may consult with copyright lawyers if you wish. Fair use is
not a right that a copyright transfer agreement can take away
from anyone, especially the author!
Not to pick on you, Stevan, but this is a point that should be
clarified: like many legal rights, fair use rights most
certainly can be waived as a matter of contractual agreement.
If you sign a contract that says you will not redistribute even
single copies of the work in question, then you'll be legally
bound to abide by it. (It would be silly to agree to such a
term, but that doesn't make it legally unconscionable.) Legal
rights don't trump contractual obligations -- in fact, exactly
the opposite is true. The whole purpose of a contract is to
define mutual rights and obligations that are not otherwise
granted or required as a matter of law.
---
Rick Anderson
Dir. of Resource Acquisition
Univ. of Nevada, Reno Libraries
rickand@unr.edu