What are the protected objects and rights of copyright
According to the Copyright Law, the objects of copyright protection include the following types :
1. Written works refer to novels, papers, Works expressed in words such as monographs and textbooks. The words here can be the words of any country or special words such as Braille;
2. Oral works;
3. Music, drama, folk art, dance, and acrobatic works. The musical works here refer to the music itself; the dramatic works refer to the script; the folk art works refer to It is the basis for cross talk, storytelling and other folk art works; dance works refer to the artistic choreography of dance; acrobatics refers to related movement choreography. If these music, drama, folk art, dance and acrobatic works are put on the stage through performers Performing a performance will extend the relevant performer's rights, which are adjacent rights related to copyright;
4. Art and photography works. It should be noted that not allAll photos are photographic works, and purely copied photos, such as ID photos, are not protected by copyright law;
5. Architectural works refer to aesthetically significant works expressed in the form of buildings or structures;
6. Television, film, and video works;
7. Engineering design, product design drawings, maps, instructions and their descriptions. It is worth noting that the Copyright Law protects these design drawings and instructions cannot be copied. As for its technical content, if protection is required, patent law or contract law may be further applied.
Rights content:
Copyright includes the following personal rights and property rights:
(1) Right of publication, that is, the right to decide whether the work will be made public;
(2) Right of signature, that is, the right to indicate the identity of the author and sign the work;
(3) 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 or tampering;
(5) The right to reproduce, that is, to make a copy of the work by printing, copying, rubbing, recording, videotaping, dubbing, remaking, etc. the right to one or more copies;
(6) Distribution right, that is, the right to provide originals or copies of works to the public by selling or donating them;
(7) Rental rights, that is, the right to license others to temporarily use film works and works created with methods similar to filmmaking, and computer software for a fee, unless computer software is not the main subject of the lease;
(8) Exhibition rights, that is, the public display of works of art, The right to originals or copies of photographic works;
( 9) Performance rights, that is, the right to publicly perform works and publicly broadcast the works through various means;
(10) Screening rights, that is, the public reproduction of art, photography, movies, and works created with methods similar to filmmaking through projectors, slide projectors and other technical equipment rights;
(11) Broadcasting rights, namely The right to publicly broadcast or disseminate works by wireless means, to disseminate broadcast works to the public by wired transmission or rebroadcasting, and to disseminate broadcast works to the public through loudspeakers or other similar means of transmitting symbols, sounds, and images;
(12) The right to disseminate information network, that is, through wired or Providing works to the public wirelessly so that the public can obtain rights to 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 by a method similar to making a movie;
(14) Adaptation right, that is, the right to change the work and create a new original work ;
(15) Translation rights, that is, the work will be The right to convert one language into another language;
(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.
The copyright owner may permit others to exercise the rights specified in items (5) to (17) of the preceding paragraph, and in accordance with the agreement Or receive remuneration in accordance with the relevant provisions of this law.
The copyright owner may Transfer all or part of the rights specified in items (5) to (17) of paragraph 1 of this article, and receive remuneration in accordance with the agreement or the relevant provisions of this law.
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