Actually, what you own is a license to use the music, not the music
itself, so you are limited by copyright restrictions. With that said, a
single copy for personal use is likely to fall under fair use. With that
said, you are on the edge when that single copy is to share with a friend
via email. And you are way over the edge if it is to distribute it more
widely than that.
Since this is for use in a multimedia project, you might get some
guidance from the Fair Use Guidelines for Educational Multimedia:
http://www.utsystem.edu/ogc/intellec...y/ccmcguid.htm
These guidelines apply to educational uses, but they should point you to
some significant limits for which non-educational uses are likely to be
more restrictive (totally restrictive if you are talking about commercial
use).
--David
--
David M. Marcovitz
Microsoft PowerPoint MVP
Director of Graduate Programs in Educational Technology
Loyola College in Maryland
Author of _Powerful PowerPoint for Educators_
http://www.loyola.edu/education/PowerfulPowerPoint/
"=?Utf-8?B?RG9ubmE=?=" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in
news:426EBB02-34CC-440A-B14D-(E-Mail Removed):
> I understood what you said before, and it was helpful. However, THIS
> time, I am talking about using a CD that I OWN. So I'm sure I have
> permission to do that.
>
> "Austin Myers" wrote:
>
>> Donna, one more time, unless you have the content providers
>> permission to use their content you can't. At least not with any
>> Microsoft provided tools as they all respect the DRM contained in the
>> file.
>>
>> Austin Myers
>> MS PowerPoint MVP Team
>>
>> Solutions to Multimedia in PowerPoint www.pfcmedia.com
>>
>>
>>
>> "Donna" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
>> news:8F0FFCF9-76FF-473D-8960-(E-Mail Removed)...
>> > I want to e-mail a presentation that plays to music but I know you
>> > have to have the track & the file in the same directory. How can I
>> > do that?
>>
>>
>