Copyright is a federal law; in the US it is the responsibility of Congress, as stated in the Constitution.
To ease international trade, most countries use laws based on the Berne Convention, which is administered by the World Intellectual Property Organization.
Unfortunately, "originality" is not defined in the law, and court decisions are inconsistent. See the link below for an interesting case.
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. Copyright is federal law.
Copyright law cannot protect ideas, only the expressionof them in writing, sound, art, etc.
Neil Boorstyn has written: 'Copyright Law With Copyright Law Cumulative Supplement' 'Boorstyn on copyright' -- subject(s): Copyright
The Copyright Act 1965 is an outdated UK copyright law; the current law is the Copyright Designs and Patents Act 1988.
Modern copyright law is based on the Statute of Anne, 1709.
Ghana adopted UK copyright law in 1911.
The current law is Copyright Act 1994 as amended.
Copyright law is a subset of Intellectual Property (IP) law.