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copyright

   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Legal, Acronyms, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia 0.03 sec.

copyright

Law applying to literary, musical, and artistic works (including plays, recordings, films, photographs, radio and television broadcasts, and, in the USA and the UK, computer programs), which prevents the reproduction of the work, in whole or in part, without the author's consent. It is the exclusive right to reproduce, distribute, display, license, or perform a work. Copyright is a form of intellectual property.

Copyright applies to a work, not an idea. For example, the basic plots of two novels might be identical, but copyright would be infringed only if it was clear that one author had copied from another. A translation is protected in its own right. The copyright holder may assign the copyright to another or license others to reproduce or adapt the work. In 1991, the US Supreme Court ruled that copyright does not exist in the information in a telephone directory since ‘copyright rewards originality, not effort’.

In the USA (since 1989) copyright lasts for a holder's lifetime plus 50 years, or a flat 75 years for a company copyright. It must be registered with the US Copyright Office of the Library of Congress to bring a court action. Works first federally copyrighted before 1978 must still be renewed in the 28th year to receive the second term of 47 years or it will fall into the public domain at the end of the 28th year. Various conditions apply to works published before 1989 and those between January 1, 1978, and March 1, 1989. For specific information, contact the Copyright Office, Library of Congress, Washington, DC. Copyright is internationally enforceable under the Berne Convention 1886 (ratified by the USA on 1 March 1989) and the Universal Copyright Convention 1952 Computer software is specifically covered in the USA under the Copyright Act 1976 and the Computer Software Act 1980.

In 1995 China was forced to crack down on its thriving industry of pirated goods (illegal copies of items protected by international copyright) after the USA threatened to impose punitive tariffs of up to 100% on all Chinese-made imports.


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? Mentioned in ? References in classic literature
 
The books have survived the span of immortality fixed by our amusing copyright laws, and seem now, when any pirate publisher may plunder their author, to have a new life before them.
But tell me, are you printing this book at your own risk, or have you sold the copyright to some bookseller?
The copyright of authors has been solemnly adjudged, in Great Britain, to be a right of common law.
 
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