How is copyright ownership determined
(1) For works created by individual citizens, the citizen who created the work is Author, this citizen has the copyright to the work.
(2) Works hosted by a legal person or other organization, created on behalf of the will of the legal person or other organization, and for which the legal person or other organization assumes responsibility, the legal person or other organization shall regard it as for the author. The legal person or other organization owns the copyright to the work.
(3) For works produced by adapting, translating, annotating, and organizing existing works, the copyright belongs to the person who adapts, translates, annotates, and organizes them.
(4) For works created jointly by two or more people, the copyright is shared by the co-authors. If a collaborative work can be divided and used, the authors can enjoy separate copyrights for the parts they created.
(5) A compilation of several works, fragments of works, or data or other materials that do not constitute a work, a work that reflects originality in the selection or arrangement of its content, is The copyright of a compilation work belongs to the compiler.
(6) For film works and works created using methods similar to filmmaking, the copyright belongs to the producer, but the copyright for screenwriters, directors, photographers, lyrics, composers, etc. The author enjoys the right of authorship, and the author of works such as scripts and music that can be used alone has the right to exercise his or her copyright alone.
(7) Works created by citizens to complete the work tasks of legal persons or other organizations are professional works, and the copyright is enjoyed by the author. However, if one of the following circumstances occurs, the author enjoys the right of authorship, and other rights of copyright are enjoyed by legal persons or other organizations:
(1) Mainly using legal persons or other organizations Engineering design drawings, product design drawings, maps, computer software and other professional works created under the material and technical conditions and for which legal persons or other organizations are responsible;
(2) stipulated in laws, administrative regulations orWorks for which the copyright is owned by a legal person or other organization as stipulated in the contract between the two parties.
(8) For commissioned works, the ownership of the copyright shall be agreed upon by the client and the trustee through a contract. If there is no express agreement in the contract or no contract has been concluded, the copyright belongs to the trustee.
(9) The right to display original works of art belongs to the owner of the original work.
(10) For works of unknown author, the owner of the original work shall exercise the copyright except for the right of signature.
The above is the introduction by the editor of Legal Savior Network. Copyright is the exclusive right of the author to the work or results, and others cannot use it without permission. If you have other related questions you would like to know, please feel free to consult the free legal consultation of Legal Savior Network, which can help you answer your doubts.