Quote:
Janet Rosen wrote:
I agree with Chuck. Same as with any teacher be it at a seminar or in a college class; the material and its presentation is that person's own work and without express written release nobody should be making it public in a recorded form.
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Actually, it's not quite as clear as that. Anything that I make, or think about, on company time belongs to the company so one would expect that the professor's lecture is the property of the institution that paid for it. And in turn, the sensei's seminar would belong to the dojo that booked and paid for it.
But then I've heard of professors claiming that students aren't allowed to take notes, the notes being on sale.