No, copying and distributing someone else's work without permission or payment would likely be a violation of their intellectual property rights. This can lead to legal consequences for copyright infringement.
Yes, you can sue someone for plagiarism if they have copied your work without permission and used it as their own. To succeed in a plagiarism lawsuit, you would need to prove that the other party intentionally used your work without proper citation or authorization. It is advisable to consult with a lawyer to explore legal options available to you in such a situation.
To patent an image, you would need to create a unique and original design that meets the criteria for a design patent. This involves submitting an application to the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) along with detailed drawings or photographs of the image. The image must be novel, non-obvious, and have industrial applicability. Once approved, the design patent will protect your image from being copied or used without your permission for a period of 15 years.
A plagiarism fine is a penalty imposed on individuals or organizations for using someone else's work without proper attribution or authorization. These fines can vary depending on the severity of the plagiarism, the extent of the copied work, and the policies of the institution or jurisdiction involved.
Yes. A 'burned" CD is a copy of an original CD. Assuming the original CD is NOT a recording of your own work but a commercial CD, which contains prerecorded audio, copying the original CD, is tantamount to Copy Right Infringement. If you have not received permission from the artist, or the creator of the original CD to make a copy of their recording, you have infringed upon the artist's rights to copy and sell their own, and original work. Copy right infringement depends almost entirely on enforcement. Enforcement, is usually carried out by means of bringing a civil suit against the party who committed the wrong or in this case, infringement. The artist or the artist's agent would be the party to bring a suit against the party who committed the infringement, in court, and prove the damages. This would be easy to prove, if you did sell any of the copied or burned CDs. Selling the "burned" or copied CD, containing the commercial work, or the work of another, is profiting from the infringement, should a sale result, thus your profits, are the artist's damages.
In general, if a book is more than 100 years old, it likely falls within the public domain and can be freely copied without infringing copyright laws. However, it is important to check the specific copyright laws in your jurisdiction, as some countries may have different rules regarding copyright duration.
A counterfeit movie which has been obtained and then illegally reprodced and distributed, without obliging the correct rights.
Saxon Math materials are protected by copyright, and cannot be copied, altered, distributed, or displayed without their permission.
The answer is: copied. He copied my work without my permission.
The opening of the Brady Bunch is protected for 95 years from publication. It cannot be copied, altered, distributed, or displayed without permission.
Unless otherwise specified, virtually everything you encounter on the internet is protected by copyright and cannot be copied, altered, or further distributed without permission of the copyright holder.
That is a description of copyright infringement.
When you copyright your work, you legally protect it from being copied, distributed, or used without your permission. This means that you have the exclusive rights to reproduce, distribute, and display your work, and you can take legal action against anyone who infringes on those rights.
To protect the software's developers rights of distribution. So that no parts of code are copied without the author's permission.
She fumed as she stared at her empty seat.
It is not protected by copyright, and can be used, copied, altered, performed, etc. by anyone without permission from anyone else.
the data of copied cells is distributed to the two daughter cells during prophase
With permission, yes.