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Copyright is a set of exclusive rights to protect original works of authorship. At its most general, it is literally "the right to copy" an original creation. In most cases, these rights are of limited duration. The symbol for copyright is © (Unicode U+00A9), and in some jurisdictions may alternatively be written as either (c) or (C).

Copyright may subsist in a wide range of creative, intellectual, or artistic forms or "works". These include poems, theses, plays, and other literary works, movies, choreographic works (dances, ballets, etc.), musical compositions, audio recordings, paintings, drawings, sculptures, photographs, software, radio and television broadcasts of live and other performances, and, in some jurisdictions, industrial designs. Copyright is a type of intellectual property; designs or industrial designs may be a separate or overlapping form of intellectual property in some jurisdictions.

Copyright law covers only the particular form or manner in which ideas or information have been manifested, the "form of material expression". It is not designed or intended to cover the actual idea, concepts, facts, styles, or techniques which may be embodied in or represented by the copyright work. Copyright law provides scope for satirical or interpretive works which themselves may be copyrighted.[citation needed] See idea-expression divide.

For example, the copyright which subsists in relation to a Mickey Mouse cartoon prohibits unauthorized parties from distributing copies of the cartoon or creating derivative works which copy or mimic Disney's particular anthropomorphic mouse, but does not prohibit the creation of artistic works about anthropomorphic mice in general, so long as they are sufficiently different to not be imitative of the original. Other laws may impose legal restrictions on reproduction or use where copyright does not - such as trademarks and patents.

2006-10-09 01:35:43 · answer #1 · answered by danielpsw 5 · 0 0

On a large scale, the entertainment industry is the U.S.'s largest export and brings in millions of dollars, which trickle into political donsic youations.On a small scale, a musician deserves to earn a living from the material they work to create. Copyright laws are designed to protect the process.
If you write and perform your own musical creation, you can do whatever you want with it. Using other people, materials, audio, music or media will fall under copyright laws, and you cannot use it unless you have written permission from the parties involved. Many require payment for the use of the material, and some will not allow you to use the material at all. Under existing laws individuals can face significant fines and/or criminal prosecution.

2006-10-07 00:06:54 · answer #2 · answered by Sir Ed 4 · 0 0

certain and no. The certain: Technically, you may want to be violating copyright regulations because you're utilising copyrighted fabric for a income. The No: when you're doing in hardship-free words one or 2 DVD's for a wedding ceremony say, no one will attempt to sue you for infringement. on the different hand when you're making 2,000 DVD's for a promenade shoot launch, employ a strong legal specialist! extra: Tom J's submit is authentic, notwithstanding it nonetheless boils right down to what that's wisely worth, on each and every aspect on the mission. If i develop right into a specialist-photog and took a photo of someone ingesting a Coke or ingesting a Wally's burger and that photo develop into so large that i had to promote it, i'm particular Coke reps and Wally's adult men might want to be at my door faster than a e mail. yet and that's a huge yet, basically through my utilising the word "COKE" in this submit might want to be an infringement on their copyright. Your better effective judgement is the mission, use it.

2016-10-16 03:54:43 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

You can get the current info from a copyright and patent lawyer, or by contacting the U.S. Copyright office .

2006-10-06 23:53:47 · answer #4 · answered by WC 7 · 0 0

If its copyright then you can copy it as much as you like as long as you don't get caught

2006-10-06 23:56:56 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

If it's copyrighted you can't copy it.

Or should I say your not supposed to anyway, without permisson from the label.

2006-10-06 23:49:27 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

You can cannot reproduce the music with the intention to profit, and you cannot broadcast it without permission and a license.

2006-10-07 00:01:35 · answer #7 · answered by TarKettle 6 · 0 0

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