What is Copyright
Law?
Read
the official text of the U.S. Copyright Law
(Title 17 of the United States Code).
United States
Copyright Law protects authors or creators of
various published and unpublished works. Except
as allowed by this code, it is a violation of
law for persons to copy, distribute, perform,
digitally transmit, or to create a new work
based upon a copyrighted work without the
permission of the copyright owner.
Categories
Protected by Copyright
Copyright
does not protect ideas, titles, names, short
phrases, works in the public domain, forms that
collect information, or links to Web sites. It
does, however, protect "forms of
expressions" delivered in the following
formats:
-
Literary works
-
Musical works (along with accompanying
lyrics)
-
Dramatic works (along with accompanying
music)
-
Pantomimes and choreographic works
-
Pictorial, graphic, and sculptural works
-
Motion pictures and audiovisual works
-
Sound recordings
-
Architectural
works
-
Computer
programs
Author's
Exclusive Rights
Copyright
law gives an author/creator the exclusive rights to:
-
Reproduce the work in copies or
phonorecords
-
Prepare derivative works based on the
copyrighted work
-
Distribute copies or phonorecords of
the work by sale to the public or other
transfer of ownership, rental, lease, or
lending
-
Perform literary, musical, dramatic,
and choreographic works, pantomimes, and
pictorial, graphic, or sculptural works,
including the individual images of a
motion picture or other audiovisual work
publicly.
Sources
Some of the information used on
this page came from these sources:
Disclaimer
Please note that the information presented
in the Online Copyright Center is for
information purposes only. It should not
be used as a substitute for actual legal
advice.