The rights of the copyright holder include the following personal rights and property rights:
(1) Right of publication, namely The right to decide whether the 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 to modify, 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, to protect the work The right not to be distorted or tampered with;
(5) The right to reproduce, that is, to reproduce the work by printing, copying, rubbing, recording, videotaping, dubbing, or photocopying, etc. The right to make one or more copies;
(6) Distribution right, that is, the right to provide the original or copies of the work to the public by selling or donating it;
(7) Rental right, that is, the right to license others to temporarily use film works and works created with similar methods of filmmaking, and computer software for a fee. Computer software is not rented. Except for the main subject matter;
(8) Exhibition right, that is, the right to publicly display originals or copies of fine arts and photographic works;
(9) Performance rights, that is, the right to publicly perform works and to publicly broadcast the works by various means;
( 10) 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;
(11) Broadcasting rights, that is, public broadcasting or dissemination of works by wireless means, dissemination of broadcast works to the public by wired dissemination or rebroadcasting, and dissemination to the public through loudspeakers or other similar tools that transmit symbols, sounds, and images. The right to broadcast works;
(12) Information network dissemination rights, that is, providing works to the public in wired or wireless ways, so that the public can choose at their own discretion the time and place to acquire the rights to the work;
(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) The right of adaptation, that is, the right to change the work and create an original new work;
(15) The right of translation, that is, the right to change the work from one The right to convert language and text into another language and text;
(16) The right to compile, that is, to assemble a work or fragments of a work into a new work through selection or arrangement rights;
(17) Other rights that should be enjoyed by the copyright owner.
The copyright owner Others may be permitted to exercise the rights specified in items (5) to (17) of the preceding paragraph and receive remuneration in accordance with the agreement or the relevant provisions of this Law.
Copyright A person 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.
Copyright refers to a series of exclusive rights that authors of literary, artistic, and scientific works enjoy over their works in accordance with the law.
It is expressed as:
p>First, the author who enjoys copyright can decide whether to use his work in the sense of copyright;
Second, he can decide whether to perform certain actions related to his personal interests in relation to his works;
Third, he can request relevant documents when necessary State agencies use compulsory assistance to protect or realize his rights.
Copyright is a special civil right. It and industrial property rights constitute the main content of intellectual property rights. In a broad sense, it also includes copyright-related rights granted by law to performers, audio and video producers, radio stations, television stations or publishers regarding their performance activities, audio and video products, radio and television programs or layout designs.
According to China's copyright system, copyright is a mixed right that includes several special personal rights and property rights. The exercise of property rights in copyright often involves personal rights. For example, the author submits his work to the publishing houseWhen publishing, you are not only exercising the right to publish, but often also exercising the right to publish.
Copyright is also a right to the continuous development of content. In countries all over the world, the content contained in copyright is not always fixed, but is constantly being developed and supplemented with the continuous development of social civilization and the continuous emergence of new technologies for using works. In short, the author's copyright does not affect the dissemination of the work.