Copyright grants creators exclusive rights over their creative works, including the right to copy, distribute, and adapt those works. Copyright protection is automatic and lasts for a long time. The purpose of copyright is to both incentivize new creation by ensuring creators can benefit financially from their works, and to uphold authors' moral rights over how their works are attributed and used. Copyrightable works include original literary, artistic, musical, and other creative works, within certain limitations and exceptions like fair use.
2. Hello!
I am Dian Eka Indriani
I am here because I ernroll in September 2020 CC
Certificate course and I want to give presentation about
Copyright. You can find me at @Dian_EI
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3. “All rights reserved”
“All rights that arise from a
creation that in order to copy
and adapt the work are reserved
by the creator”
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This Presentation material is a derivative of the
September 2020 Creative Commons Certificate
Course by Creative Commons, licensed CC BY 4.0.
4. Fundamental of Copyrights
1. Copyright grants a set of exclusive rights to creators
2. Copyright does not protect facts or ideas themselves,
only the expression of those facts or ideas.
3. Copyright is automatic the moment a work is created in
a medium
4. Copyright protection lasts a long time
This template is downloaded at www.slidescarnival.com/help-use-presentation-template
This template is free to use under Creative Commons Attribution license. 4
6. Provide an incentive for the creators
to encourage new creation of works
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Utilarian Author Rights
Moral rights of the Authors:
Ensures attribution for authors as the
right of paternity & preserves the
integrity of their creative works.
It is The bond between an authors and
theirs creative output.
7. How It Works?
Copyright law establishes the basic terms of use that apply
automatically to original works (certain exclusive right but also
recognizing that users have certain right to use the works
without any license and permissions).
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8. What do Exclusive
rights control?
Authorization the
translations of the
creators’ works
Copies of their works Publicity
Perform and communicate
their works to the public,
including via broadcast.
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Make adaptations and
arrangements of their
works. Grant permission to
others
Additional exclusive
rights
Moral Rights
neighboring rights.
9. What’s Copyrightable
• Literary and artistic works
• Translations, adaptations, arrangements of
music and alterations of literary and artistic
works
• Collections of literary and artistic works
• May include Applied art and industrial designs
and models and Computer Software
This depend on each country’s treaties, It is on a
country-by-country basis. 9
10. × Trademark law
Helps producers of goods
and services in protecting
their reputation.
To differentiate similar
products and service.
Other Intellectual Property
Protections
× Patent law
A time-limited monopoly to
their inventions.
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× Trade secrets,
× Publicity rights,
× and moral rights.
11. The Public Domain
× Give the public permission to use works in ways that would otherwise
violate those rights.
× Expired Copyright law protection
× The creators in purpuse put it in public domain.
× Failed to maintain copyright
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12. Exceptions and
Limitations
× A fair use (US) and fair dealing (in some
Countries) example: private study, research,
education satire, parody, criticism review, news
report.
× Some creative works which copyright law does
not affect (Traditional Knowledge label).
× Copyright Law.
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