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copyright |
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copyrightLaw 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’.
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Additional chapters deal with copyrights restored from the public domain; the public domain outside the United States; copyright protection and its duration; copyright notice requirements, trademarks and publicity rights, and other related areas. Google did not make executives available for an interview, but Associate General Counsel Nicole Wong said in an e-mail that a 2001 case established that a search engine may display miniaturized images without violating copyrights. This position starts from the premise that copyrights are, fundamentally, property rights, and that property rights are, as a general rule, a good thing. |
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