Legal and ethical obligations are not external constraints imposed on designers — they are an integrated part of professional responsibility that shapes every decision in the design process. From the research phase through to final production, designers must navigate a range of obligations to their clients, their audiences, and society.
KEY TAKEAWAY: Legal obligations define what designers must do under law. Ethical obligations define what designers should do to act responsibly and with integrity. Both categories are assessed in VCD.
The most commonly assessed legal area in VCD:
What is protected by copyright:
- Original images, illustrations, and photographs
- Written text, including slogans and copy
- Music and audio content
- Typeface designs (though there are nuances — typeface shape may be protected; the font software is definitely protected)
- Designs, logos, and artworks
Key rules for designers:
- You cannot use someone else’s work without obtaining permission or a licence
- Purchasing stock images does NOT mean unlimited use — check the licence terms carefully
- “I found it on Google” is not a defence — search results display copyrighted work
- Creating something “inspired by” a work can still infringe copyright if it copies protected elements
Licencing options for designers:
- Royalty-free licences: Pay once and use within specified terms
- Rights-managed licences: Pay per specific use case, platform, or territory
- Creative Commons licences: Open licences with conditions (attribution, non-commercial, no derivatives)
- Original photography/illustration: Commission original work
| Field | Key Legal/Ethical Considerations |
|---|---|
| Communication design | Copyright in images/type; advertising standards (honest claims); accessibility in digital |
| Environmental design | Building codes; accessibility regulations; environmental impact permits; safety standards |
| Industrial design | Product safety legislation; materials safety; patent protection; environmental disposal |
In your own folio and practice:
- Document your image and font sources and their licences
- Use your own photographs, properly licensed stock images, or Creative Commons content
- Obtain and document consent for any photographs of people
- When using colour, check contrast ratios for accessibility
- When using cultural imagery, research appropriateness and attribution
COMMON MISTAKE: Treating legal and ethical obligations as a separate, standalone topic. In practice, they are embedded in every stage of the design process — from how you conduct research to how you source images to what production methods you choose.
VCAA FOCUS: Exam questions about ethical and legal obligations often present a scenario and ask you to identify specific obligations relevant to it. Practise recognising which obligation (copyright, privacy, sustainability, representation) is most relevant to specific situations.