Law Firms Licence
Discover our tailored Law Firms Licence, helping those who work in the legal sector to share, scan and copy documents with the correct permissions.
About the licence
Do you work for a law firm that:
- Shares articles from digital and print magazines, learned journals and books with colleagues and clients by email, or by posting these on your organisation’s intranet?
- Includes extracts of published content from magazines, journals and books in internal reports, strategy documents, position papers and more?
- Includes extracts of published content in presentations to colleagues and clients?
- Includes visual material (photos and illustrations) from digital and print magazines, journals and books in presentations and reports to colleagues and clients?
If the answer to any of these is ‘yes’, then you need to have a licence to ensure your organisation is not breaking the law, and that the people who created the material you may be reusing are properly compensated.
If anyone in your organisation is copying and sharing print or digital/online content with their colleagues or clients for work purposes, then having an ICLA Licence – and implementing its clear rules – will indemnify your staff to copy from its full range of publications and resources. This ensures your organisation is copyright-compliant.
ICLA offers a specifically tailored licence for the legal sector. This provides annual blanket cover to copy and reuse content from print and digital publications, so you don’t have to seek permission from copyright owners each time you copy.
If your organisation is receiving media-monitoring content and sharing it with colleagues and clients, you need a licence from Newspaper Licensing Ireland (NLI).
Open Access
Some of the publications that an organisation might wish to distribute internally are made available under Open Access or Creative Commons licences. These licences have variable terms with some allowing all further uses and others being restricted to educational use (schools, colleges and universities) or free-to-view only. Some Open Access publications can therefore be used without reference to the ICLA licence – the authors are permitting their work to be read, copied and re-used freely, though they should always be acknowledged and their Moral Rights respected.
It’s important to read the licence terms of open access works carefully depending what you want to do, but if you have the ICLA Licence and only wish to copy 5% or less of a work there is no need to check under which licence/set or rules you can do so – you can be confident you are copyright compliant.
Note: The Licence doesn’t prevent an organisation from securing direct permission to copy/re-use from the publisher (ad hoc or via a primary licence). An organisation might, for example, want to purchase permission to copy in excess of 5% of a publication, or to copy from a publication that isn’t covered by the Licence.