What are the procedures for copyright application
1. Application
Materials to be submitted
(1) A set of application forms
1. Title of the work , Categories of works (written works, fine arts, photographic works, music, drama, folk art, dance, film, television, video works, engineering design, product design drawings and others).
2. Signature, completion date, whether to publish, first date and place.
3. The form of completion of the work (individual, collaboration, commission, job, other).
4. Author status and copyright holder status.
5. Signature and seal of the applicant.
6. The content of the form should be filled in with a pen or signature pen. The handwriting should be clear and correct, and no alteration is allowed.
7. The cover page shall be filled in by Jiangxi Provincial Copyright Protection Center.
(2) Proof of identity of the applicant
1. Individual applicants: copy of ID card.
2. Applicants for legal entities and unincorporated entities:
(1) Copy of business license ;
(2) Power of attorney (application for registration by the agent);
(3) Trusteeship Copy of the person’s ID card;
(4) Copy of the author’s ID cardCopy of ID card;
(5) Copy of ID card of legal representative;
(6) Author’s statement A copy of the copyright ownership instructions or agreement.
(3) Guarantee of Rights
1. Individual applicants: must be signed by the applicant.
2. Applicants from legal entities and non-legal entities: The application must be signed by the legal representative and stamped with the official seal.
(4) Application for Voluntary Registration of Works
1. Completion time of the applied work and by whom Completed.
2. The name of the work.
3. Submit a voluntary application for work registration.
4. Signature:
Individual applicants: Just sign by yourself;
Applicants from legal entities and unincorporated entities: The application must be signed by the legal representative and stamped with the official seal.
(5) Instructions for Voluntary Registration of Works
1. Content introduction (theme, central content of the work, Briefly describe the main features and characteristics of the work).
2. Creation process (author identity, specific process, application purpose, scope of use of the work).
3. Signature:
Individual applicants: Just sign by yourself;
Applicants from legal entities and unincorporated entities: The application must be signed by the legal representative and stamped with the official seal.
(6) Provide work samples
Provide creative drafts for text works; pictures of art works must be at least from Six perspectives to reflect the characteristics of the work; 2 photos for photographic works; three views and three views for engineering product design drawings.Renderings or actual photos; VCDs for film and television works, etc.
2. Pay the registration fee. Charges are strictly in accordance with the Copyright Office's work registration fee standards.
3. Review. After receiving the application, it will be reviewed. If it is qualified, it will be sent to the leaders of the Provincial Copyright Bureau for approval. If it is qualified, the Provincial Copyright Bureau will issue a "Work Registration Certificate", file it and notify the applicant to come and collect it. The above registration processing period is generally 10 working days.
What does copyright include
1. Personal rights of copyright: right of publication, right of signature, right of modification, Protect the integrity of your work.
2. Copyright rights: reproduction rights, distribution rights, rental rights, exhibition rights, performance rights, screening rights, broadcast rights, information network dissemination rights, filming rights, Adaptation rights, compilation rights, translation rights and other rights that should be enjoyed by the copyright owner.
For relevant laws, please refer to:
Article 10 of the Copyright Law of the People’s Republic of China includes the following: Personal rights and property rights:
(1) Right of publication, that is, the right to decide whether a work will be made public;
(2) The right of signature, that is, the right to indicate the identity of the author and sign the work;
(3) The right of modification, that is, the right to modify or authorize others to modify the work;
(4) The right to protect the integrity of the work, that is, the right to protect the work from distortion and tampering;
(5) The right to reproduce, that is, the right to make one or more copies of the work by printing, copying, rubbing, recording, videotaping, ripping, reproducing, etc.;
(6) Distribution rights, that is, the right to provide originals or copies of works to the public by selling or donating them;
(7) Rental rights, that is, for a fee The right to license others to temporarily use film works, works created using methods similar to filmmaking, and computer software, except where the computer software is not the main subject of the rental;
(8 ) exhibition rights, that is, publicThe right to display originals or copies of artistic works and photographic works;
(9) Performance rights, that is, publicly performing works and publicly broadcasting works by various means The right to perform;
(10) Screening rights, that is, the public reproduction of fine arts, photography, movies and creations using methods similar to filmmaking through projectors, slide projectors and other technical equipment rights to works, etc.;
(11) Broadcasting rights, that is, to publicly broadcast or disseminate works by wireless means, and to disseminate broadcasts to the public by wired dissemination or rebroadcasting works, as well as the right to disseminate broadcast works to the public through loudspeakers or other similar tools for transmitting symbols, sounds, and images;
(12) Information Network The right of dissemination, that is, the right to provide works to the public through wired or wireless means, so that the public can obtain the works at a time and place of their own choosing;
(13 ) Filming right, that is, the right to fix the work on a carrier by making a movie or using a method similar to making a movie;
(14) Adaptation right, that is, changing the work , the right to create new and original works;
(15) Translation right, that is, the right to convert a work from one language into another language Rights;
(16) Right of compilation, that is, the right to assemble works or fragments of works into new works through selection or arrangement;
(17) Other rights that should be enjoyed by the copyright owner.
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