Browse Articles By Tag: copyright
What is a Copyleft? You’ve probably heard the term “copyleft” once or twice. It’s kind of a play on words, rather than official law that’s on the books somewhere. Copylefting is when the owner of a copyright actually uses copyright laws to remove all...
26.11.2012 · From joanellis
How the Pirate’s Bay Manages to Stay in Business A BitTorrent is defined as a peer to peer file sharing protocol, and is used to distribute large amounts of data without actually having to store information online permanently. (...)
24.11.2012 · From joanellis
Bearshare and other Peer to Peer Services Until early 2006, Bearshare made a name for itself as a sort of a second coming of the original Napster. In 2006, the people who owned and operated Bearshare agreed to pay a huge settlement to the RIAA, forcing the company to...
24.11.2012 · From joanellis
Who has the Publication Rights? If there was ever an area of copyright law that gets murky and confusing, it’s probably in publication rights. What publication rights literally means is that the holder of those rights is allowed to, well, publish. (...)
24.11.2012 · From joanellis
MP3
How does the Law Pertain to Trading MP3’s? For a period of time in the early twenty first century and late 1990’s, MP3’s had a sort of black mark of piracy about them. This was owed mainly to Napster, the program which allowed users to freely trade MP3’s,...
24.11.2012 · From joanellis
Buying Intellectual Property There are a lot of different ways of selling or buying intellectual property, actually. Outright Purchase For the longest time, the only way an artist could get published was basically to forfeit any and all of their ownership rights on...
22.11.2012 · From joanellis
Retaining Creator Ownership Believe it or not, the vast majority of art and entertainment, and even most software, in the United States is not owned by the original creator or author. As a general rule, ever since companies in the United States first started...
21.11.2012 · From joanellis
Copyright Law and Video Sharing Sites We all know about Youtube and Google video, of course, and we all know that you can go on those sites and find tons of copyright infringing copies of copyright protected content. (...)
21.11.2012 · From joanellis
How do UK Intellectual Property Laws Differ from US Laws? In many areas, the United States and the United Kingdom are pretty similar when it comes to intellectual property laws, copyrights, the public domain, and so on. (...)
20.11.2012 · From joanellis
What do Patent Lawyers do? A patent attorney, or patent lawyer, well, you can probably guess what they do, which is that they are attorneys at law with specialized qualifications regarding clients wishing to obtain or protect patents. (...)
19.11.2012 · From joanellis
Parody: What can I get away with? Thanks to the Fair Use Doctrine, parody is actually considered to be one hundred percent legal as dictated by the first amendment to the United States constitution. (...)
18.11.2012 · From joanellis
Global Copyrighting Infringement If you lived in Turkey around the time George Lucas released the first “Star Wars” films, you may remember a movie called “Turkish Star Wars”. You may also have seen some clips from this movie if you have ever visited youtube,...
17.11.2012 · From joanellis
Should I Keep my Publishing Rights? Just to have an example to go with: Let’s say you’ve created a hilarious comic strip. It’s funny, the characters are endearing, and you’re pretty good at drawing in such a way to capture the eye and provoke, at least, a few...
17.11.2012 · From joanellis
What can I do with Open Content? Open content includes any content released into a format which explicitly declares itself to be free for use. Open content does not, usually, include selling rights, but usually will include just about every other right. (...)
16.11.2012 · From joanellis
Per page: