Fair use is an exemption to copyright law; using it carries no penalties.
That will vary from fair to fair.
Fair use applies to quoting or copying copyrighted writings. For example, it is fair use to quote a sentence from a copyrighted book or article if it is relevant to something you are writing for publication. It is fair use to copy anything for your own personal use, not for profit.
Fair use
Here's a great example: "I used to incorrectly use to a lot, instead of too". I am going to the fair, not two the fair or too the fair.
you use a fair test when you are doing one at school for you topic research programme.
Yes; fair use does not exclude any types of works.
Bruce A. Lehman has written: 'The Conference on Fair Use' -- subject(s): Conference on Fair Use, Fair use (Copyright), Information superhighway, Law and legislation
I will fair off if i stick to my dreams
The fairness of this murder is that the suspect is going to jail for 15 years.
Fair use is a small part of copyright law that allows certain unlicensed uses of protected works. If you use protected works, without a license, in a manner not addressed by the fair use clause (in other words, if your use is not fair), your use would be infringing. Copyright infringement is punishable by fines ranging from $750 to $30,000.
Fair use is a defense for an accusation of infringement; the ideal consequence would be being found not guilty.
Fair use is called a "balancing factor," and in the US is closely tied to the right to free speech.