Literary Property in the United States |
No grāmatas satura
1.3. rezultāts no 86.
54. lappuse
The Constitution provides that Congress may " ... secure to authors ... the exclusive right to their ... writings , and the ... there appears to be a limit to what may be considered a " writing of an " author " in the legal sense .
The Constitution provides that Congress may " ... secure to authors ... the exclusive right to their ... writings , and the ... there appears to be a limit to what may be considered a " writing of an " author " in the legal sense .
78. lappuse
Writings . The various types of materials covered by both common law and by statute as " writings indicate that that term has been interpreted in the broad sense of a presentation in any concrete form , rather than in the limited ...
Writings . The various types of materials covered by both common law and by statute as " writings indicate that that term has been interpreted in the broad sense of a presentation in any concrete form , rather than in the limited ...
168. lappuse
Literary Property is intangible property consisting of a franchise to make public use of the writing of an author for credit , for profit , or both ... Composite works are all writings which include the writings of two or more authors .
Literary Property is intangible property consisting of a franchise to make public use of the writing of an author for credit , for profit , or both ... Composite works are all writings which include the writings of two or more authors .
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Saturs
INTRODUCTION | 7 |
PHILOSOPHICAL BASES OF LITERARY | 15 |
LEGAL BASIS OF COPYRIGHT | 43 |
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 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 copyright substantial term thereof tion transfer types United unless unpublished valid violation whole writings