What personal rights can the copyright owner enjoy
1. The right to publish the work.
The author has created a work, and the decision-making power of whether to publish or make the work public is up to the author, the copyright holder. The right of publication is an important right of the copyright owner. It is the basis for the copyright owner to realize the property rights of the copyright. At the same time, the publication of works is often the result of the copyright owner exercising the right of publication such as publishing, copying, and filming.
2. The author’s right of signature.
The author's right of signature is the right of the copyright holder to indicate his or her identity when publishing a work that he or she has created or participated in. When signing a work, in addition to indicating In addition to being the creator of the work, it also indicates that the signer assumes relevant rights and obligations.
3. The right to modify the work.
The right to modify works refers to the right of the copyright owner or to entrust others to modify, add or delete the works created by the author. The right to modify the work belongs exclusively to the author during the protection period.
4. Protect the integrity of works.
Once the copyright owner's work is published, the copyright owner enjoys the right not to distort or tamper with the created work, and he or she may add, delete, alter, distort or destroy the work at will. The integrity of the work is prohibited by copyright law.
What rights are included in copyright property rights
1. Right of reproduction: refers to printing, copying, copying, The right to make one or more copies of the work by rubbing, recording, dubbing, or photographing. It is the most basic right in copyright property rights. It is the exclusive right of the copyright holder and is often used in conjunction with distribution or broadcast rights. Without the permission of the copyright owner or legalWithout permission of law, others may not copy the work without authorization.
Copying methods: one is manual copying; the other is mechanical copying.
2. Distribution right: refers to the right to provide works or copies thereof to the public by selling or donating them. is an important property right. Works that are not protected by copyright cannot be distributed. It is to realize certain economic rights.
It can be exercised in two ways: the copyright owner can publish it himself or authorize others to publish it.
Methods of distribution: flexible and diverse, such as distributing, lending, selling, and giving away.
3. Rental right: the right to license others to temporarily use film works, works created using similar filmmaking methods, and computer software for a fee. Exceptions are made where computer software is not the main subject of the lease.
4. Exhibition right: It is the right to publicly display the original or copy of the work. The copyright owner has the right to exhibit the work himself or authorize others to exhibit it and obtain remuneration. The purpose is for viewing by an unspecified public.
5. Performance right: also the right of public performance and performance. Refers to the right to publicly perform works and publicly broadcast works by various means. The characteristic is that it must be conducted in a public manner and for an unspecified majority of people. Performing other people's works requires permission from the copyright owner. However, published works can be performed for free without the permission of the copyright owner and without payment of remuneration to the copyright owner, but the name of the author and the title of the work must be indicated, and other rights of the copyright owner must not be infringed.
6. Screening rights: that is, the right to publicly reproduce art, photography, movies, and works created with methods similar to filmmaking through projectors, slide projectors and other technical equipment. "Public representation" is its essential feature. The right to screen a film is exercised by the producer. To screen a film, you only need to seek permission from the producer, and there is no need to obtain permission from the relevant authors.
7. Broadcasting rights: that is, to publicly broadcast or disseminate works by wireless means, to disseminate broadcast works to the public by wired dissemination or rebroadcasting, and through loudspeakers or other similar means of transmitting symbols, sounds, images, to communicate broadcast works to the public. Copyright owners have the right to prohibit or permit Chuangyou to disseminate their works through broadcasting.
8. Information network dissemination right: that is, providing works to the public through wired or wireless means so that the public canrights to the work at a time and place chosen by the person. Information that is in the public domain is not protected by copyright law and can be used freely by the public. Some use requires permission from the copyright holder and payment of a certain amount of remuneration.
9. Filming rights: also known as film and television rights, refers to the right enjoyed by the copyright owner to make films of his works and to produce works in a similar way to filmmaking. . But it is an original work, and it is also a interpretation of the original work.
10. Right of deduction: refers to the right enjoyed by authors or other copyright holders to recreate based on their works. Including:
(1) Adaptation right: refers to the right to change the form of expression of the work without changing the basic ideological content of the work. Rewriting without changing the form of expression of the work without changing the type of the work.
(2) Translation right: refers to the right to transform the language of the original work into other languages and use it to express the work. The Berne Convention and the Universal Copyright Convention stipulate that under certain conditions, the government can compulsorily license the translation of foreign works without the need to obtain the consent of the foreign copyright owner.
(3) Right of compilation: the right to select or arrange works or fragments of works and assemble them into new works. Including annotation rights, organizing rights and editing rights. The compiler shall enjoy copyright in the work resulting from the compilation.
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