The Berne Convention, which most countries' copyright laws are based on, does not distinguish between types of creative work. In the US, the applicable law is US Code Title 17, and in the UK, it's the Copyright Designs and Patents Act 1988.
The End User Licensing Agreement specifies how copyright law applies to a program.
Copyright law cannot protect ideas, only the expressionof them in writing, sound, art, etc.
Copyright law applies virtually equally to both "hard copy" and digital works.
Copyright applies automatically as soon as a work of sufficient originality is fixed in a tangible medium.
In IT, copyright most often applies to software, which can be protected by both copyright AND patent law. Most software-related copyright issues are addressed in detail in end user licensing agreements.
Samuel J. Sutton has written: 'Copyright law' -- subject(s): Art, Copyright
Charles Palmer Phillips has written: 'The law of copyright in works of literature and art and in the application of designs' -- subject(s): Art, Copyright, Design protection
Works of sufficient originality that are fixed in a tangible medium.
Copyright law is a federal law, granted in the Constitution.
Copyright law.
Malaysia's copyright law is Act 332, the Copyright Law of 1987. More information can be found at the link below.
No. You could copyright a drawing or photograph of the logo but the logo itself would have to be protected as a trademark.