The following sovereign states are not signatories to the Berne Convention:
Algeria
Angola
Burma/Myanmar
Burundi
Cambodia
East Timor
Eritrea
Ethiopia
Iran
Iraq
Kiribati
Kuwait
Maldives
Mozambique
Nauru
Palau
Palestine
San Marino
Seychelles
Sierra Leone
Somalia
Turkmenistan
Tuvalu
Uganda
It is worth specifically noting that North Korea is a signatory to Berne.
Trademark yes copyright no.
There are no specific copyrights associated with the Dodge logo, instead it is a registered trademark of Chrysler Group LLC and is protected by the trademark laws.
Because other countries have their own laws.It's also a challenge because you need to know about the infringement in order to act on it--the local government isn't going to do it for you.
Copyright protected or trademark images, such as cartoon characters, require licenses from their owners.
All of them, presumably. Most countries have copyright laws based in some way on the Berne Convention, administered by the World Intellectual Property Organization, part of the World Trade Organization.
All members of the World Trade Organization must have copyright laws aligned with the Berne Convention. There are 153 member states of the WTO.
No. There may be trademark, privacy, defamation, or libel issues based on how the names are used, but names are not protected by copyright.
Cookbook publishers are affected by the same laws that apply to other books. copyright laws, trademark laws, and contract laws. Other issues are laws concerning fair use of recipes and photographs.
Nigerian copyright law is meant to protect people creating original works in Nigeria. However, as a member of the World Trade Organization, Nigeria's copyright laws are harmonized with the laws of more than 160 other countries, all of whom are required to recognize each other's copyrights.
Yes, they do.If you're asking what those laws are called, it's usually one of copyright, patent, or trademark.
Many countries happened to update their copyright laws in 1912, so Copyright Act 1912 may refer to laws in Australia, the Netherlands and its territories at the time, and others.
No they do not. Copyright, trademark, and patent are Federal statutes and are the sole purview of the Federal Court System. These cases are prosecuted through the US Attorney Generals Office and laws are enforced through the Department of Justice.