Literary Property in the United StatesScarecrow Press, 1950 - 277 lappuses |
No grāmatas satura
1.–3. rezultāts no 27.
137. lappuse
... institution ; and , if a public institution should buy it , the author or owner of the literary property has made it available to a general public - a public institution could buy it for no other purposes . Even auctions of manuscripts ...
... institution ; and , if a public institution should buy it , the author or owner of the literary property has made it available to a general public - a public institution could buy it for no other purposes . Even auctions of manuscripts ...
140. lappuse
... institution , which constitute private communications and are not ordinarily made available to the general public , there would appear to be no use of unpublished manuscripts by a public institution that can be considered private . Thus ...
... institution , which constitute private communications and are not ordinarily made available to the general public , there would appear to be no use of unpublished manuscripts by a public institution that can be considered private . Thus ...
141. lappuse
... institution involved will not be identified . A public institution made single photostat copies of a group of manuscript letters written by a famous , deceased person . The person with whose permission the copies were made owned the ...
... institution involved will not be identified . A public institution made single photostat copies of a group of manuscript letters written by a famous , deceased person . The person with whose permission the copies were made owned the ...
Saturs
INTRODUCTION | 7 |
WHAT IS LITERARY PROPERTY? | 12 |
What Does Literary Property Protect? | 13 |
Autortiesības | |
28 citas sadaļas nav parādītas.
Citi izdevumi - Skatīt visu
Bieži izmantoti vārdi un frāzes
35 Stat Act Mar appear arts assignment Atlantic Monthly author or proprietor author's right common law copyright common law literary common law right composite concept confusion Congress Constitution contract Copyright Act copyright law copyright office copyright owner copyright proprietor copyright protection Copyright Statute copyrighted material damages defendant deposit exclusive right fact fair franchise Gentlemen's Agreement granted held ideas infringement intended journal law literary property letter license limited publication literary property rights monopoly moral right multiple copies multiply notice of copyright obtain copyright patent permission permitted person piracy plaintiff present profit public domain public institution purpose recognized Register of Copyrights reprints reproduction right to credit right to privacy rights of authors scholar scholarly institutions secure single copy statutory copyright Supreme Court thereof tion transfer uncopyrighted unfair competition United unpublished manuscript valid copyright vend violation