2.3.1 Intellectual Property Rights, Gail McMillan and Edward Fox
Whether an author is creating an electronic or paper
thesis or dissertation, it does not change their rights and obligations under
the law. While university policies vary, it is the custom that the person who
creates a work is the owner of the copyright. Therefore, the author of an
electronic thesis or dissertation is the copyright holder and owns the
intellectual property, their ETD. Within the
http://www4.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/ch1.html]
The owner of an ETD, as explained above usually the student, must take direct action if an ETD service is to be provided. The wording that is agreed to in writing, by student authors as well as the faculty working with them, must make clear how ETDs are handled. The wording used at Virginia Tech is one model. In the approval form used for this purpose, the following is agreed:
The student certifies that the work submitted is the one approved by the faculty they work with.
The university is given authority, directly or through
third party agents, to archive the work and to make it accessible, in accord
with any access restrictions also specified on the form. This right is in perpetuity, and in all
forms and technologies that may apply.