intellectual property

Cards (49)

  • Copyright is the exclusive right to reproduce, distribute, perform or display an original work.
  • Intellectual Property refers to the creation of the human mind, such as inventions, literary and artistic works, designs, symbols, images, and names.
  • Intellectual property or IP refers to a creation of the mind. Everything the human mind can make-includes literary and artistic works, inventions, designs, music, dances, and plays- are all IPs.
  • without legal protection these ideas are easy to steal, and creators may not take the time and money to innovate.
  • Republic Act 8293 or the Intellectual Property Code of the Philippines (IP Code) covers intellectual property and its protection. The IP Code updated and consolidated the country's laws on patents, trademarks, copyright in the light of emerging global issues in the field of intellectual property and in compliance with the commitments under international conventions and treaties to which country is a party (Expressions of Creativity, IP Philippines).
  • Types of Intellectual Properties includes Copyrights, Patent, Trademarks.
  • copyright secure right given to creators or authors for their work to be protected from unauthorized use. It allows the creator to derive economic or financial reward from the use of his works by others and to claim authorship of a work and to have that authorship recognized.
  • Plagiarism is an ethical violation that occurs most often in academic situations when a party takes credits for work that was not of their own authorship while copyright infringement occurs when a party copies, reproduces, distributes, displays or performs, or makes a derivate version of a protected work without permission of a copyright owner or the law.
  • plagiarism is an ethical issue, whereas copyright infringement is a legal issue.
  • Copyright provides the creator with exclusive rights to reproduce the work, perform the work, create derivative works based on the original work, and distribute the work.
  • Copyright prevents other people copying, giving away, or selling your work without your permission.
  • Examples of copyright works are artistic works such as a novel, poem, photograph, movie, a painting, computing which includes computer software application and business that includes a database, annual reports, architectural plans.
  • Copyright notice - A notice that the copyright in a work has been reserved by the author or his/her legal representative.
  • How to write a Copyright Notice: The copyright symbol ⓒ or the word copyright. Year(s) of publication. Name of the copyright owner.
  • You can also add a statement of rights to clarify the rights you hold over your work, such as: All rights reserved-You own all rights to the work. Some rights reserved-You own some rights to the work. No rights reserved-You do not own any rights to the work.
  • Fair Use - a person may use copyrighted material without permission from the copyright holder for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, and research.
  • Trademark: a symbol, word, or words legally registered or established by use as representing a company or product.
  • Intellectual property, or IP, refers to a creation of the mind, including literary and artistic works, inventions, designs, music, dances, and plays.
  • Without legal protection, these ideas are easy to steal and creators may not take the time and money to innovate.
  • The Intellectual Property Code of the Philippines (IP Code) covers intellectual property and its protection.
  • The IP Code updated and consolidated the country's laws on patents, trademarks and copyright in the light of emerging global issues in the field of intellectual property and in compliance with commitments under international conventions and treaties to which the country is a party.
  • Copyright protection is automatic when you produce an original media product.
  • Copyright is the exclusive and legally secured right given to creators or authors for their literary and artistic works to prohibit or authorize the reproduction or copying of the work.
  • Copyright allows the creator to derive economic or financial reward from the use of his works by others and to claim authorship of a work and to have that authorship recognized.
  • Plagiarism is an ethical violation that occurs most often in academic situations when a party takes credits for work that was not of their own authorship.
  • Copyright infringements occur when a party copies, reproduces, distributes, displays or performs, or makes a derivate version of a protected work without permission of the copyright owner or the law.
  • The main difference between plagiarism and copyright infringement is that plagiarism is an ethical issue, whereas copyright infringement is a legal issue.
  • Copyright provides the creator with exclusive rights to: Reproduce the work, Distribute or sell the work, Display or perform the work publicly, Create derivative works based on the original work.
  • Copyright prevents other people copying, giving away, or selling your work without your permission.
  • Examples of copyright works include artistic works, a novel, a poem, a photograph, a movie, lyrics to a song, a musical composition in the form of sheet music, a sound recording, a painting, a plan for a building, and computing.
  • Examples of copyright works in business include a database, text of a marketing plan or business plan, numbers and calculations in a financial forecast, architectural plans, annual reports, a manual for the operation of equipment, technical specifications for a device, business proposals, letters and emails sent by a business.
  • A copyright notice is a short line of text that lets the public know that your work is protected by copyright law and is not to be copied.
  • The copyright symbol (©) or the word “copyright” is part of a copyright notice.
  • The year(s) of publication is part of a copyright notice.
  • The name of the copyright owner is part of a copyright notice.
  • A copyright notice can include a statement of rights to clarify the rights you hold over your work, such as: “All rights reserved”, “Some rights reserved”, or “No rights reserved”.
  • Copyright infringement cases in the Philippines can be found on the website of the Intellectual Property Office of the Philippines.
  • Fair use is one of the exceptions in copyright which allows use of copyrighted materials without obtaining permission if the use can be considered fair.
  • There is a four-factor analysis which must be applied to each use to determine whether the use is fair.
  • Copyrighted materials can be fairly used for the purposes of criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, research, and scholarship.