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Generally, materials produced by federal agencies are in the public domain and may be reproduced without permission.
U.S. government works are in the public domain (i.e., not protected by the U.S. Copyright Act). You can freely use them (in a copyright sense) without obtaining permission or paying a copyright fee.
U.S. State Department seals, the U.S. Great Seal, logos, and other official insignia may not be used or reproduced without written permission. Use of the Great Seal of the United States is governed by Public Law 91-651, Title 18 of the United States Code.
Copyright in photography means that you own an image you created. The law says you created that image as soon as the shutter is released. This means that photographer copyright laws state that whoever pushed the button owns the copyright.
Photographers and their joint author(s) are usually the copyright owner of the photograph. But the work-made-for-hire doctrine outlines certain circumstances where the author and copyright owner of the photograph is an employer or third party.
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About Fair Use Section 107 of the Copyright Act provides the statutory framework for determining whether something is a fair use and identifies certain types of usessuch as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and researchas examples of activities that may qualify as fair use.
Most U.S. government creative works such as writing or images are copyright-free.
Photography Disclosure You agree that AFP owns the copyright in these photographs and you waive any claims based on usage of the photographs or the works derived therefrom. Upskill, reskill and earn rsum-worthy competencies you can leverage throughout your career. Get started.

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