Copyright and Intellectual Property Right 1. 2 Use and Protection of Intellectual Property in Online Business Intellectual property (general term) includes:

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
What’s Yours In Mine: Intellectual Property and Copyright For the Magazine Media Publisher Jim Sawtelle Partner and Co-leader, Media, Publishing and Marketing.
Advertisements

HSC: All My Own Work Copyright.
Intellectual Property OBE 118 Fall 2004 Professor McKinsey Some property, very valuable property, exists only in our minds, in our imagination. It is intangible.
P A R T P A R T Crimes & Torts Crimes Intentional Torts Negligence & Strict Liability Intellectual Property & Unfair Competition 2 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Business.
Chapter 5 Intellectual Property & Internet Law
IP=Increased Profits How to Make Your IP Work For You Rachel Lerner COSE Fall 2006.
Copyright Law and “Fair use”
For Teachers & Students By: Terri Hall. The Copyright Law (U.S. Code, Title 17) was established to balance the rights of authors, composers, performers.
What is copyright? the exclusive legal right, given to an originator or an assignee to print, publish, perform, film, or record literary, artistic, or.
8/24/2015 Copyright Myths. 8/24/2015 Why Has Copyright become and Issue? Due to the ease of copying graphics, images, text and video from the Internet,
Intellectual Property
1 Copyright & Other Legal Issues. 2 WHAT IS COPYRIGHT? Copyright is the form of protection provided by the laws of the United States to authors of “original.
The New Legal Landscape for Event Industry Social Media Kathryn Carrier, Esq. © 2011 Katy Carrier.
Copyright. US Constitution Article I – Section 8 Congress shall have the power to promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited.
Copyright 101 Understanding the Basics 1. Myths You can use anything you can download from the Internet If a work does not contain the copyright symbol.
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY LAWS and Fair Use Guidelines for Educational Multimedia.
Crime and Punishment: Piracy and the Law Adapted from Internet Piracy Exposed Chapter 2 by Guy Hart-Davis.
XP New Perspectives on The Internet, Sixth Edition— Comprehensive Tutorial 4 1 Information Resources on the Web Finding, Evaluating, and Using Online Information.
© 2007 by West Legal Studies in Business / A Division of Thomson Learning CHAPTER 7 Intellectual Property.
LAW for Business and Personal Use © 2012 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible.
CS110: Computers and the Internet Intellectual Property.
COPYRIGHT: A Pirate’s Paradise? Prepared form Com 435 by Donna L. Ferullo, J.D. Director University Copyright Office Donna L. Ferullo.
Copyright and Intellectual Property Issues in the Digital Environment Amy Ginther Project NEThics (sm) Office of Information Technology University of Maryland.
10/6/2015 What is Copyright? Top Ten Myths Robert McAndrews Humble ISD Career & Technology Education Center.
Chapter 17-Intellectual Property Protection Intellectual Property Rights  There are various forms of Intellectual property rights (IP rights) and they.
Protecting your product What is Intellectual Property (IP)? Legal rights that result from intellectual activity in the industrial, scientific, literary.
Digital Citizenship Created By: Kelli Stinson June 2011.
What is Copyright? Copyright is a form of intellectual property protection granted under Indian law to the creators of original works of authorship such.
Copyright Laws & Regulations Created by The University of North Texas in partnership with the Texas Education Agency.
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY
Fundamentals of Business Law Summarized Cases, 8 th Ed., and Excerpted Cases, 2 nd Ed. ROGER LeROY MILLER Institute for University Studies Arlington, Texas.
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY Objective Intellectual Property Defined A product resulting from human creativity, an original work fixed in a tangible medium.
Copyright and Fair Use. Topics The Copyright Quiz Intellectual Property What is Copyright? What is Fair Use? Common Violations Guidelines.
© 2007 West Legal Studies in Business, A Division of Thomson Learning Chapter 5 Intellectual Property.
Copyright and Fair Use. Topics Intellectual Property What is Copyright? What is Fair Use? Common Violations Guidelines TEACH Act 2002.
Copyright Laws & Regulations. Copyright © Texas Education Agency, All rights reserved. 22 A.Title 17 of U. S. Code 1. Protection provided by law.
Intellectual Property Laws and Fair Use Guidelines for Educational Multimedia.
The Basics of Intellectual Property Law Understanding IP by A. David Spevack, Office of Naval Research.
The Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) is a law that gives you the right to access information from the federal government. It is often described as the.
Boating is fun… Your Lawyer can show you how! HOW TO STAY OUT OF THE INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY MINEFIELD.
From Article I, Section 8 of the U.S. Constitution: “To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors.
HSC: All My Own Work What is copyright and what does it protect? How does it relate to me?
Copyright Law A Guide for Educators. Jolene Hartnett, RDH, BS Seattle Central College © 2015 Certain materials in this program are included under the.
LIBS100 Intellectual Property Copyright and Fair Use July 25, 2005.
Security and Ethics Basics of Fair Use A Fair(y) Use Tail.
Copyright Laws Intellectual Property Protection Copyright Copyright Act of 1976 Prevents the unauthorized copying of a work of authorship A protection.
COPYRIGHT LAW PRESENTATION By Jacelyn Vital-McPherson.
Chapter 18 The Legal Aspects of Sport Marketing. Objectives To introduce the key legal concepts and issues that affect the marketing of the sport product.
Copyright, Intellectual Property, and Privacy 1 Lesson Plan: BMM A9-4.
©2002 by West Legal Studies in Business A Division of Thomson Learning Chapter 6 Business Torts, Intellectual Property and Cyberlaw.
Intellectual Property. An original (creative) work, invention or information protected by law through a trademark, patent, copyright or trade secret.
Intellectual property (IP) refers to creations of the mind: inventions, literary and artistic works, music, movies, symbols, names, images, and designs.
IP and the working archive Issues arising from the use of Mass Observation Elizabeth Dunn Gaby Hardwicke - Solicitors & Trade Mark Attorneys.
©2001 West Legal Studies in Business. All Rights Reserved. 1 Chapter 7: Intellectual Property.
Intellectual Property “The gift that keeps on giving.” Paul Royster, Coordinator of Scholarly Communications University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries June.
Intellectual Property. An original (creative) work, invention or information protected by law through a trademark, patent, copyright or trade secret.
A GUIDE TO COPYRIGHT & PLAGIARISM Key Terms. ATTRIBUTION Identifying the source of a work. For example, a Creative Commons "BY" or attribution license.
©2005 by West Legal Studies in Business A Division of Thomson Learning Fundamentals of Business Law 6 th Edition Chapter 5 Intellectual Property and Internet.
Chapter 10 Intellectual Property and Internet Law.
Copyright Laws & Regulations
Intro to Intellectual Property 3.0
What you need to know to avoid legal problems.
Essentials of the legal environment today, 5e
How many of the following companies can you identify in 1 minute?
Intellectual Property
CS 115: COMPUTING FOR The Socio-Techno Web
Copyright law 101 Nicole Finkbeiner
Intellectual Property Rights
How Copyright Works with Social Media
Chapter 2: Copyright Law in the Digital Age.
Presentation transcript:

Copyright and Intellectual Property Right 1

2 Use and Protection of Intellectual Property in Online Business Intellectual property (general term) includes: – All products of the human mind Tangible or intangible – Protections afforded by copyrights and patents, trademarks registration, service marks Right of publicity – Limited right to control others’ commercial use of an individual’s name, image, likeness, identifying aspect of identity – Limited by U.S. First Amendment provisions

3 Use and Protection of Intellectual Property in Online Business (cont’d.) Online businesses must avoid: – Deceptive trade practices – False advertising claims – Defamation or product disparagement – Infringements of intellectual property rights By using unauthorized content

World Intellectual Property Day April 26 On World Intellectual Property Day this year, WIPO's focus is on promoting VISIONARY INNOVATION as the key to a secure future WORLD IP DAY

Copyright Issues Copyright – Right granted by government to the author (creator) of literary or artistic work Specific time length provided in copyright law – Gives author (creator) sole and exclusive right to the work (print, publish, sell) – Includes virtually all forms of artistic or intellectual expression 5

6 Copyright Issues (cont’d.) Idea contained in an expression – Cannot be copyrighted Requirement – Idea must be separate from expression – Example: mathematical calculations Collection of facts – Can be copyrighted – Example: Yahoo! Web Directory

7 Copyright Issues (cont’d.) U.S. law still allows registration (no longer required) Work created after 1989 – Copyrighted automatically by virtue of copyright law Most U.S. Web pages protected by automatic copyright provision Web client computer copy of HTML file – Acceptable under fair use Includes copying it for use in criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, or research

8 FIGURE 8-7 U.S. law governing the fair use exception

Copyright Issues (cont’d.) Fair use specific factors – Nonprofit educational uses have better chance of qualifying than commercial uses – Court may consider painting using different standards than sound recording – Small sections qualify when entire work might not – Court may consider amount of damage caused to value of copyrighted work 9

10 Copyright Issues (cont’d.) Copyright law difficult to apply – Due to elements such as fair use Vicarious copyright infringement – Entity capable of supervising infringing activity – Obtains a financial benefit from infringing activity Example: Napster – Failed to monitor its network – Profited indirectly from the infringement Music downloads, copying – Legality unclear in many cases