It doesn't. Patent law protects inventions.
Copyright and patent laws protect intellectual property by giving the creator the exclusive right to derive financial gain from the work or invention, or authorize others to do so.
The book Edison the Firefly and the Invention of the Light Bulb is copyright 2008.
Copyright does not protect facts or ideas, but will protect the expression of them.
Copyright does not protect ideas, only the expression of those ideas.
Copyright and patent protection are both forms of intellectual property rights that grant exclusive rights to creators. Copyright protects original works of authorship, such as literary, artistic, and musical works, while patents protect inventions or discoveries. The main difference between copyright and patent is that copyright protects the expression of ideas, while patents protect the idea itself. Copyright gives the creator the exclusive right to reproduce, distribute, and display their work, while a patent gives the inventor the exclusive right to make, use, and sell their invention.
Inventions are protected by patent law.
Copyright law cannot protect ideas, only the expressionof them in writing, sound, art, etc.
A Copyright would protect an authors idea.
No, copyright does not protect names nor ideas.
Copyright protects texts, images, and the website itself.
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Copyrights protect the "owner" of that material. To use or reproduce it without express approval of the "copyright" holder is illegal. "Copyright Laws'" protect intellectual property from unauthorized use.