2. Part of a motion picture or other audiovisual work
A work based upon a pre-existing work; a work consisting of alterations or modifications that as a whole justify it as an original work of authorship.
Semiconductor chips given protection for 10 years from the sooner of registration or commercial exploitation.
3. Trademark (First Use in Commerce = Ownership)
stakeholder. A violation of the exclusive rights of a copyright holder , such as copying, distributing, or performing the copyright owner's work without permission unless the use is otherwise authorized by law.
plagiarism. U.S. copyright law generally does not giver the owner of an original creative work an exclusive right to: distribute non-original work to the public.
Infringement. is the "unauthorized" use of any material protected by copyright law. Takes an existing work and adapts it in some way in order to create a new work. Derivative work. The "use or close imitation of the language or thoughts of another author and the presentation of them as one's own original work.".
mashup. A new work that translates or transforms one or more original copyrighted works is known as.
The exclusive right to make distribute copies of the work to the public and make them available either by sale, lease, rental, or lending. Right of Distribution. The exclusive right to reproduce the work in copies or phono-records. Right of Reproduction.
T/F: Publication of private facts cases are the easiest type of privacy case for a plaintiff to win.
If Debra Price sued a newspaper for invasion of privacy after it reported that in 1971 she was arrested for planting a bomb under a police car during a protest demonstration, most courts would rule. that it is permissible to relate stories about a person's past public life.
T/F: The use of the likeness of a celebrity on a shirt, trading cards or other such items is always regarded as an appropriation.
T/F: The use of a name or likeness in any publication sold to a reader for a profit is considered an appropriation.
T/F: Courts are in agreement that a person using wi-fi to send or receive material via the Internet enjoys a reasonable expectation of privacy.
One of the most important scholarly articles contributing to the legal recognition of a right to privacy in the United States was published in 1890 in the Harvard Law Review and was co-authored by:
that it is permissible to relate stories about a person's past public life.