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I'm working on a non-academic book that cites from many academic resources. I make heavy use of figures in my book and many of them are copyrighted, either by the authors or the journals. My experience thus far has been that I'm unable to secure permissions from the journals without paying a prohibitive cost. For more complex and creative figures, I've chosen to just not include them.

However, for very simple figures, which are essentially just scatterplots with regression lines - I want to know what really is copyrighted? And if my figures do infringe upon copyright, how else I could possibly present the data in a graphical form? I obviously wouldn't copy-paste the figure directly, but I want to understand if the below example would infringe upon copyright.

(Note that I've seen similar questions on here, but none that include a direct example)

Theirs: enter image description here

Mine: enter image description here

  • This seems like a duplicate, since even though the author created them the rights to publish are owned by someone else: https://academia.stackexchange.com/q/4881/63475 – Bryan Krause Feb 20 '24 at 03:59
  • Another: https://academia.stackexchange.com/q/182071/63475 – Bryan Krause Feb 20 '24 at 03:59
  • Another: https://academia.stackexchange.com/q/19041/63475 – Bryan Krause Feb 20 '24 at 04:02
  • There seems to be a lot of questions already that cover this. I don't think adding an example changes the question. – Bryan Krause Feb 20 '24 at 04:03
  • Given the context of a non-academic book, and the fact that you have not stated the jurisdiction(s), you may find it useful or at least educational to consult a copyright lawyer. – Anyon Feb 21 '24 at 03:22

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