Literary Property in the United States |
No grāmatas satura
1.3. rezultāts no 28.
13. lappuse
And even that is not protected in the same degree that patents protect inventions . To obtain a patent , an inventor must show sufficient novelty in execution of the method or mechanism which he wishes to protect to support a claim of ...
And even that is not protected in the same degree that patents protect inventions . To obtain a patent , an inventor must show sufficient novelty in execution of the method or mechanism which he wishes to protect to support a claim of ...
34. lappuse
There is an important distinction between copyrights and patents . Letters patent give a monopoly to make , vend , and use , while copyright does not give an exclusive right to use . Copyright protection is extended to authors mainly ...
There is an important distinction between copyrights and patents . Letters patent give a monopoly to make , vend , and use , while copyright does not give an exclusive right to use . Copyright protection is extended to authors mainly ...
74. lappuse
Both law and policy forbid monopolizing a machine except within the comparatively narrow limits of the patent system . Since machines which operate according to charts are useless without these charts , to copyright the charts would in ...
Both law and policy forbid monopolizing a machine except within the comparatively narrow limits of the patent system . Since machines which operate according to charts are useless without these charts , to copyright the charts would in ...
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Saturs
INTRODUCTION | 7 |
WHO MAY OBTAIN COPYRIGHT? | 56 |
WHAT ARE WRITINGS OF AUTHORS? | 77 |
Autortiesības | |
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35 Stat Act Mar appear apply arts assignment claim common law literary common law right composite concept confusion Congress consent considered Constitution contract copy Copyright Act court covered damages decisions dedicate defendant deposit determine effect entitled exclusive right existence expression extent fact fair give given granted hand held ideas important indicate infringement intended interest interpretation issue journal law literary property letter libraries limited literary property rights manuscript material matter means monopoly moral right multiply nature necessary noted notice object obtain original owner performance periodical permission permitted person plaintiff prevent principle printed production profit proprietor protection published question reason recognized record Register reprint reproduced respect restrictions scholar secure statute statutory statutory copyright substantial term thereof tion transfer types United unless unpublished valid violation whole writings