Using the intellectual property of someone else is punishable by the payment of the rights holder with a fee under a compulsory license as well as punitive damages and imprisonment in some extreme cases.
Intellectual property is a third party property being owned by a person or entity. This means that intellectual property can, in fact, be owned by someone.
You would want a license in hand before selling something based on someone else's intellectual property.
To further understand Intellectual Property here's a simple comparison between tangible property and intellectual property:Tangible PropertyIntellectual PropertyIf you want to permanently transfer tangible property, you sell that property.If you want to permanently transfer intellectual property, you assign rights in that propertyIf you want to acquire temporary rights to tangible property such as a house or car, you rent or lease them from someone.If you want temporary rights to someone else's intellectual property, you license those rights.To relinquish your rights to tangible property without receiving any compensation, you give away the property.To do the same thing with intellectual property rights, you would waive those rights.If someone takes your tangible property without your consent, that property is considered stolen.If someone uses your about patents, copyrights, or trademarks without your permission, those rights are considered to be infringedIf someone uses your trade secrets without permission they are misappropriated.When any property, tangible or intangible, is sold or assigned, the new owner has full control over that property and can resell it, change it, destroy it, or give it away without the consent of the former owner.When intellectual property is licensed, the licensor may impose restrictions on what the licensee can and cannot do with the licensed material. Those uses and restrictions would be included in the license grant.Items that are sold usually have minimal restrictions and can be resold or transferredIntellectual Property usually includes restrictions such as how long the licensee can continue to use the intellectual property, whether the licensee can copy the Intellectual Property, and whether the licensee can disclose the intellectual property to others.Hardware is soldSoftware is licensedThe purchaser has full ownership subject to any liens or encumberancesThe licensee has a right to use the licensed materials subject to the terms and conditions imposed by the licensor in the license grant .
copyright infringement
The biggest difference, and the one cited most frequently in arguments about copyright and filesharing, is that if I take your physical property, you don't have it anymore. You had a screwdriver, now I have a screwdriver. But with intellectual property, there's no thing changing hands: you had a song, now we each have a song.Intellectual property rights also expire after a set period of time. After a while, you can use my song without my permission. But you always need permission to use my screwdriver.The most esoteric difference is that real property has inherent value, while intellectual property does not. An actual car has a known worth; the patents that make up that car, and the trademarks the car is sold under, only have value in relation to the actual car.
I guess the design could be protected under the intellectual property law if you trademarked it.
basically, plagiarism. stealing someone else's ideas and/or words, and claiming them as your own.
computer piracy
No, an owner can advertise his property at any time. A real estate license is required if one is being paid a commission to sell a property belonging to someone else.
It depends on if they are copyrighted, you should go to the site where the images are from and check if they have copyrights with them. if they have copyrights with them,the answer is yes To not violate someone else s intellectual property it´s best to design your own images,or contact the copyright holder.
Yes, the State of Colo, If someone is managing residential property 4 units or less that is not theirs, they have to have a Active Real Estate License.
You can sell anything on land you own or someone's property (if they let you)