What rights include property rights
Copyright includes personal rights and property rights:
Personal rights are also called moral rights, specifically including:
(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 to modify, that is, modify or authorize The right of others to modify the work;
(4) Protection The right to integrity of a work, that is, the right to protect the work from distortion and tampering;
Property rights are also called economic rights, including:
(1) Right of reproduction, that is, by printing The right to make one or more copies of the work by , copying, rubbing, recording, videotaping, ripping, re-photographing, etc.;
(2) Distribution right, that is, the right to provide originals or copies of works to the public by sale or donation;
(3) Rental rights, that is, the right to license others to temporarily use film works and to make films using similar methods for a fee rights to works and computer software created by other methods, except that the computer software is not the main subject of the lease;
(4) Exhibition right, that is, the right to publicly display originals or copies of art works and photographic works;
(5) Performance right, that is, the right to perform the work publicly and to publicly broadcast the work by various means;
(6) Projection rights, that is, through projectors, slide projectors and other technical equipment The right to publicly reproduce fine arts, photography, films and works created by methods similar to filmmaking;
(7) Broadcasting rights, that is, the public broadcast or dissemination of works by wireless means, and the dissemination of broadcast works to the public by wired dissemination or rebroadcasting, and the right to communicate broadcast works to the public through loudspeakers or other similar means of transmitting symbols, sounds and images;
(8) Information network dissemination right, that is, the right to provide works to the public in wired or wireless ways, so that the public can obtain the works at a time and place of their own choosing ;
(9) Filming rights, that is, filming rights Film or the right to fix the work on a carrier in a manner similar to filmmaking;
(10) Right of adaptation, that is, the right to change the work and create an original new work;
(11) Translation right, that is, the right to convert a work from one language to another;
(12) Right of compilation, that is, by selecting or arranging works or fragments of works, they are assembled into Rights in new works;(13) shall be Other rights enjoyed by copyright owners.
In addition to the rights listed above, in order to avoid the lag in legislation, the Copyright Law also stipulates a safety clause, that is, "other rights that should be enjoyed by the copyright holder." For these property rights, copyright A person may permit others to exercise it or may transfer it in whole or in part, and receive remuneration in accordance with the agreement or the relevant provisions of this law. The main civil law protection methods for copyright include stopping the infringement, eliminating the impact, making a public apology and compensating for losses. p>
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