Literary Property in the United StatesScarecrow Press, 1950 - 277 lappuses |
No grāmatas satura
1.–3. rezultāts no 32.
8. lappuse
... considered the most authoritative source below the United States Supreme Court because it has tried many more cases in this field than have the others . In common law cases , which are not ordinarily tried in Federal Courts , except ...
... considered the most authoritative source below the United States Supreme Court because it has tried many more cases in this field than have the others . In common law cases , which are not ordinarily tried in Federal Courts , except ...
58. lappuse
... considered this point and required positive approval by the author , rather than assuming that silence gives con- sent ( 121 , 58 , 45 , 145 , 170 ) . In view of the fact that the author has a right to choose whether he will copyright ...
... considered this point and required positive approval by the author , rather than assuming that silence gives con- sent ( 121 , 58 , 45 , 145 , 170 ) . In view of the fact that the author has a right to choose whether he will copyright ...
87. lappuse
... considered to be " restricted publi- cation " or " limited publication " and is not considered as being a " general publication which would give the public access to the work . " ( 77 ) General Publication The Act provides to authors a ...
... considered to be " restricted publi- cation " or " limited publication " and is not considered as being a " general publication which would give the public access to the work . " ( 77 ) General Publication The Act provides to authors a ...
Saturs
PART | 7 |
WHAT IS LITERARY PROPERTY? | 12 |
What Does Literary Property Protect? | 13 |
Autortiesības | |
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