And then there’s Copyright

And then there’s Copyright

copyrightCopyright ensures that the person who created something–whether a book or a piece of music–is reimbursed for his intellectual work. If there were no copyright protection, there would be no economic incentive to create these works.

A copyright is a set of legal rights that an author has over his work for a limited period of time. Copyright covers everything from using images or sound files from the Web to photocopying.

Most information is protected by copyright. The exception is work that is in the “public domain,” which can be reproduced or used by anyone. However, you still must credit the author. Some examples of public domain sources:

Public Domain Sources and Examples

constitutionPublications of the U.S. Government – U.S. laws and other publications of the Federal government, the U.S. Constitution


Copyright has been waived by the author. – Software called freeware


 

Works on which the copyright has expired – Works by William Shakespeare

 

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