| Assignment
of copyright - Like a sale of copyright, usually
made in return for a lump sum payment of a share of the income
produced by the work. For example, in the case of a music
publishing agreement, a transfer of ownership of the song
copyright from the songwriter to the music publisher is made
in return for the promises the publisher makes in the music
publishing agreement regarding advance and periodic payment
of royalties to the author. In addition to assignment of an
entire copyright, an author may also assign only part of a
copyright. The copyright statute requires that the transfer
of ownership of any copyright be made in a written document
signed by the person assigning ownership of the copyright
to someone else; no verbal assignment of copyright is possible.
Anyone who acquires any right of copyright by assignment can,
in turn, sell that right to someone else unless the written
assignment of copyright provides otherwise. An assignment
of copyright may also be referred to as a "transfer"
of copyright. Assignment of copyright is one of three ways
that ownership of rights in copyright is transferred to someone
besides the author of the copyrighted work; the other two
are license and work-for-hire.**
Berne Convention
- The Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic
Works, signed in Berne, Switzerland on September 9, 1886,
and all acts, protocols, and revisions thereto. A work is
a "Berne Convention work" if:
1. in the case of an unpublished
work, one or more of the authors is a national of a nation
adhering to the Berne Convention, or in the case of a published
work, one or more of the authors is a national of a nation
adhering to the Berne Convention on the date of the first
publication;
2. the work was first published in a nation adhering to
the Berne Convention, or was simultaneously first published
in a nation adhering to the Berne Convention and in a foreign
nation that does not adhere to the Berne Convention;
3. in the case of an audiovisual work - (a) if one or more
of the authors is a legal entity, that author has its headquarters
in a nation adhering to the Berne Convention; or (b) if
one or more of the authors is an individual, that author
is domiciled, or has his or her habitual residence in, a
nation adhering to the Berne Convention;
4. in the case of a pictorial, graphic, or sculptural work
that is incorporated in a building or other structure, the
building or other structure is located in a nation adhering
to the Berne Convention; or
5. in the case of an architectural work embodied in a building,
such building is erected in a country adhering to the Berne
Convention.
For purposes of Paragraph 1, an author who is domiciled
in or has his or her habitual residence in, a nation adhering
to the Berne Convention is considered to be a national of
that nation. For purposes of Paragraph 2, a work is considered
to have been simultaneously published in two or more nations
if its dates of publication are within thirty days of one
another. **
Case law - Law that
originates in the decisions of courts as opposed to written
laws passed by state legislatures of the U.S. Congress, which
are called "statues." **
Compilation - A work
formed by the collection and assembling of pre-existing materials
or of data that are selected, coordinated, or arranged in
such a way that the resulting work as a whole constitutes
an original work of authorship. The term "compilation"
includes collective works. **
CONFU Guidelines
- Established in September 1994, CONFU (Conference on Fair
Use) is the venue for development of guidelines for Fair Use
in the electronic environment. CONFU participants have been
working toward development of guidelines for a number of areas
including: interlibrary loan, electronic reserves, visual
images, and distance education.
CONTU Guidelines
- Non-binding, but commonly accepted, numerical specifications
adopted by libraries and others to define practical limits
to copying of copyrighted works under the doctrine of "fair
use" as set forth in the new Copyright Act of October
19, 1976. These guidelines were developed by "CONTU,"
the "National Commission on New Technological Uses of
Copyright Works," and were agreed to by the principal
library, publisher, and author organizations prior to acceptance
by House and Senate sub-committees working on the Copyright
Act. Libraries generally base their limits on fair use photocopying
on the CONTU Guidelines. [more
information]
Consumer Broadband and Digital
Promotion Act of 2002 - Introduced by Sen. Ernest
Hollings, D-S.C., would give the entertainment and technology
industries up to 18 months to agree to a technological standard
that would halt the spread of unauthorized copying of digital
video and audio. Makes it a criminal act to circumvent technology
used to protect copyrights.
Copies - Material
objects, other than phonorecords, in which a work is fixed
by any method now known or later developed, and from which
the work can be perceived, reproduced, or otherwise communicated,
either directly or with the aid of a machine or device. The
term "copies" includes the material object, other
than a phonorecord, in which the work is first fixed. **
Derivative work -
An alternative version of a copyrighted work, i.e., an work
"derived" from or based upon one or more pre-existing
works, such as a translation, musical arrangement, dramatization,
fictionalization, motion picture version, sound recording,
art reproduction, abridgement, condensation, or any other
form in which a work may be recast, transformed, or adapted.
A work consisting of editorial revisions, annotations, elaborations,
or other work of authorship is a derivative work. The right
to prepare derivative works from a copyrighted work is one
of the exclusive rights of copyright reserved to copyright
owners in the U.S. copyright statute. **
DMCA/Digital Millennium Copyright
Act - 1996 "comprehensive reform" of U.S.
Copyright Law. Addresses copyright issues presented by emerging
digital media environment. "Key among the topics included
in the DMCA are provisions concerning the circumvention of
copyright protection systems, fair use in a digital environment,
and online service provider (OSP) liability (including details
on safe harbors, damages, and "notice and takedown"
practices.) [EDUCAUSE - "Current Issues"] [more
information]
Fair use - A kind
of public-policy exception to the usual standard for determining
copyright infringement; that is, there is an infringing use
of a copyrighted work but because of a countervailing public
interest, that use is permitted and not called infringement.
Any use that is deemed by law to be "fair" typically
creates some social, cultural, or political benefit which
outweighs any resulting harm to the copyright owner. The copyright
statute identifies six purposes that will qualify a use as
a possible fair use: criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching,
scholarship, or research. Once any use of a copyrighted work
has been proved to have been made for one of these six purposes,
the use must be examined to determine whether it is indeed
fair. The copyright statute lists four factors that courts
must weigh in determining fair use; the purpose and character
of the use, including whether such use is of a commercial
nature or is for non-profit educational purposes; the nature
of the copyrighted work; the amount and substantiality of
the portion used in relation to the copyrighted work as a
whole; and the effect of the use upon the potential market
for or value of the copyrighted work. **
First Sale Doctrine
- The doctrine specified in Title 17, section 109 of the U.S.
Code, - "Limitations on exclusive rights: Effect of transfer
of particular copy or phonorecord," in part, that "
the owner of a particular copy or phonorecord lawfully made
under this title, or any person authorized by such owner,
is entitled, without the authority of the copyright owner,
to sell or otherwise dispose of the possession of that copy
or phonorecord. " Libraries, which regularly purchase
works and loan them to users, are clearly very dependent on
First Sale.
Fixation - One of
three statutory requirements for copyright protection; the
other two are that the work must embody some "expression"
of the author, rather than consisting only of an idea or ideas,
and the work must be "original," that is, the work
was not copied from another work. The U.S. copyright statute
provides that the moment a work is "fixed" in any
tangible form that allows the work to be perceived by the
senses (with or without the aid of a mechanical device, such
as a CD player or videocassette player), that work is automatically
protected by copyright. A work is "fixed" in a tangible
medium of expression when its embodiment in a copy or phonorecord,
by or under the authority of the author, is sufficiently permanent
or stable to permit it to be perceived, reproduced, or otherwise
communicated for a period of more than transitory duration.
A work consisting of sounds, images, or both, that are being
transmitted, is considered by the copyright statute to be
"fixed" if a fixation of the work is being made
simultaneously with its transmission. **
Intellectual property
- Intangible property that is a product of the imagination,
i.e. copyrights, trademarks, and patents. Although all three
protect products of the human imagination, copyrights, trademarks,
and patents are distinct but complimentary. Each is governed
by a different federal law and the principles concerning ownership,
registration, and infringement of each vary widely. **
Joint work - A work
prepared by two or more authors with the intention that their
contributions be merged into inseparable or interdependent
parts of a unitary whole. **
Patent - A patent
is a monopoly granted by the U.S. Patent Office for a limited
time to the creator of a new invention. A utility patent may
be granted to a process; a machine; a manufacture; a composition
of matter; or an improvement of an existing idea that falls
into one of these categories. Utility patents endure twenty
years after the application for a patent was filed. Plant
patents are issued for new asexually or sexually reproducible
plants and last seventeen years from the date of issue. Design
patents are granted for ornamental designs used for nonfunctional
aspects of manufactured items. A design patent lasts fourteen
years from the date it is issued. **
Permission - A consent
to use a work, usually by reprinting or reproducing it in
some other work, such as the reproduction of photographs in
a biography of the subject of the photographs. Permissions
are actually non-exclusive licenses to use a work in a specified
way. The owner of copyright in the materials sought to be
used may or may not be compensated for the use.
Public domain - Primarily,
works for which copyright protection has expired. The U.S.
copyright statute is based on the assumption that creative
people will be encouraged to be creative if they are given
exclusive control for a period of time over the use of their
works. After that control ends, the public benefits from the
right to make unlimited use of the previously protected creations.
When a work falls into the public domain the work has become
available for fair use in any way by anyone. Besides works
for which copyright protection has expired, the other major
category of public domain works is works created by officers
or employees of the U.S. government as part of their government
jobs, which are in the public domain because the government
has chosen not to claim copyright in works created at the
taxpayers' expense. ** [more
information]
Publication [including public
display] - The distribution of copies or phonorecords
to the public by sale or other transfer of ownership, or by
rental, lease, or lending. The offering to distribute copies
or phonorecords to a group of persons for purpose of further
distribution, public performance, or public display, constitutes
publication. A public performance or display of a work does
not of itself constitute publication. To perform of display
a work "publicly" means (1) to perform or display
it at a place open to the public or at any place where a substantial
number of persons outside of a normal circle of a family,
and its social acquaintances is gathered; or (2) to transmit
or otherwise communicate a performance of display of a work
to a place specified by clause (1) or to the public, by means
of any device or process, whether the members of the public
capable of receiving the performance or display receive it
in the same place or in separate places at the same time or
at different times. Because publication, in the context of
copyright, can determine the expiration of the term of copyright
for a work created as a work-for-hire or under a pseudonym,
it can be very important to determine whether and when such
a work has been published within the meaning of the copyright
statute. **
Security Systems Standards
and Certification Act (SSS) - Act would require that
all future digital technologies include federally-mandated
"digital rights management" (DRM) technologies [some
form of copyright protection] in order to permit "content
providers' to control/restrict how consumers can use digital
content.
Statue of limitations
- The period within which a lawsuit must be filed. The statute
of limitations for copyright infringement suit instead of
the money lost by the plaintiff as a result of an infringer's
actions plus the actual amount by which the infringer profited
from the use of the plaintiff's work. Because actual damages
can be very difficult, time-consuming, expensive, or impossible
to prove during infringement lawsuits, and because infringer
often do not profit from their infringements, awards of statutory
damages available under the copyright statute have been increased
to permit awards up to $ 150,000, depending on the circumstances
and the judgment of the court. **
Term of copyright
- The period during which copyright protection endures for
a copyrightable work. For any work created after December
31, 1977, copyright protection begins the moment the work
is first fixed in tangible form, How long it last depends
to a large extent on who created it and under what circumstances.
Under ordinary circumstances, copyright protection lasts for
the remainder of the life of the author of the work plus seventy
years; if two or more authors jointly create a work, copyright
protection will endure until seventy years after the last
of the authors dies. If a work is created as a work-for-hire,
anonymously, or under fictitious name, the term of copyright
will be either one hundred and twenty years from the date
the work was created or ninety-five years from the date is
published, whichever period expires first. **
TEACH Act - The Technology,
Education and Copyright Harmonization Act or TEACH Act was
signed into law on November 2, 2002. It redefines the terms
and conditions on which accredited, nonprofit educational
institutions may use copyright protected materials in distance
education including websites without permission from the copyright
owner and without payment of royalties.
Trademark - A word
or symbol used to identify a product or service in the marketplace.
Rights in a trademark accrue only by use of the trademark
in commerce and belong to the company that applies the mark
to its products rather than to the person who creates the
name or logo. A company gains rights in a trademark in direct
proportion to the geographic scope and duration of its use
of the mar; ordinarily, the company that uses a mark first
gains rights in that mark superior to those of any other company
that later uses it for the same product or services. Unauthorized
use of a mark is infringement. **
Transfer of copyright
- Another term for assignment of copyright ownership. A transfer
of copyright ownership is an assignment, mortgage, or exclusive
license, or any other conveyance, alienation, or hypothecation
of a copyright or any of the exclusive rights comprised in
a copyright, whether or note it is limited in time or place
of effect, but not including a nonexclusive license. **
Work made for hire - A work created by an independent contractor
(a freelancer) if the work falls into one of nine categories
of specially commissioned works named in the U.S. copyright
statute and both the independent contractor and the person
who commissions the creation of the work agree in writing
that it is to be considered a work-for-hire, or a work that
is created by an employee as part of his or her full-time
job. Works-made-for-hire belong to the employers of the people
who create them, and those employees are considered the authors
of those works for copyright purposes from the inception of
the works. (Work-for-hire is one of the three ways that ownership
of rights in copyright are transferred to someone besides
the author of the copyrighted work; the other two are assignment
of copyright and license of copyright.) **
** Definition quoted in full from
The Copyright Guide; a friendly guide to protecting and profiting
from copyrights, rev. ed., by Lee Wilson, Allworth Press,
2000 . [Allworth Press: (212) 777-8395; http://www.allworth.com/]
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