TRADEMARKS, which must be renewed every ____ after registration* - correct answer ✔✔ 10
years
The STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS for any copyright infringement case is - correct answer ✔✔ 3
Years
Copyright - correct answer ✔✔ right guaranteed by statute to the author/originator of certain
works
Why is copyright important? - correct answer ✔✔ ~Logo indicates a work is not public domain
~Copyright belongs to the author of the work
~Registration through office establishes a date of publication
~An author must register a work origination in the U.S. or can sue for infringement
Copyright owners have control over: - correct answer ✔✔ ~Copyright reproduction
~Derivatives
~Authority to publish sell loan or rent copies
~Right to display/perform work
~Moral rights known as author of work
~The right to withdraw a work from a distribution
What CAN be copyrighted? - correct answer ✔✔ 1. Literary works;
2. Musical works and accompanying music;
3. Dramatic works and accompanying music;
4. Pantomimes and choreographic works;
,5. Pictorial, graphic, and sculptural works;
6. Motion pictures and other audiovisual works;
7. Sound recordings;
8. Architectural works.
Along with the exclusive right of the author to.. - correct answer ✔✔ ~Reproduce the work
~Prepare and create derivative works
~Publicly perform the work
~Publicly display the work
~Publicly perform a digital sound recording
What CAN'T be copyrighted - correct answer ✔✔ ~Trivial materials (titles, slogans, etc)
~Ideas
~Facts
~Utilitarian goods (things used to produce other things)
~Methods, systems, equations and Mathematical principles
What CAN'T be copyrighted EXAMPLE - correct answer ✔✔ Nike's "Just Do it" can't be
copyrighted, but it CAN be TRADEMARKED
the law protects the dramatic expression of an idea (a script for ex) but - correct answer ✔✔
NOT the idea itself
Wheaton v. Peters (1834) - correct answer ✔✔ ~Henry Wheaton sued Richard Peters for
copyright violation of Wheaton's reports, a compilation of Supreme Court decisions
~Established that congress establishes how long a copyright lasts
*The type of technology for copyright does NOT matter
,*copyright protects the form of an idea, NOT the idea itself
*applies to fixed work and lasts for a specific period of time
!!Peters won!!
Property - correct answer ✔✔ laws concern ownership things and rights of ownership
First Sale Doctrine - correct answer ✔✔ the purchaser of a copyrighted item may use lend sell
and give it away but cannot distribute copies of the item
Fair Use Doctrine - correct answer ✔✔ ~Intellectual property used for purposes such as
criticism, content, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, or non-commercial research
~Basically says you can use someone's copyrighted work IF it follows the four rules
~Decided in copyright revision act of 1976!!
Copyright Act of 1976 - correct answer ✔✔ ~Copyright was extendeed to life of the author +50
years
~Law became more uniform by superseding state laws
~Copyright became federal law
Factors of Fair Use Doctrine - correct answer ✔✔ 1. Purpose & character of secondary use (non-
commercial/parody are acceptable to be considered fair use)
2. Characteristics of material/nature of the work
3. amount/substantiality of the work portion that was used in the secondary work
4. Plaintiff's market value
*TRANSFORMATIVE USES often protected/considered "fair use" by this factor - correct answer
✔✔ Often protected/considered "fair use" by this factor
, Characteristics of material/nature of the Fair Use Doctrine - correct answer ✔✔ ~Is the work
still available?
~Is the work consumable? (like a worksheet)
~Is the work informational or creative (informational is considered more of a "fair use" than
creative works)
~Is it published or unpublished (author has the first right to use) (like in Harper and Row v.
Nation Enterprises)
Plaintiff's market value - correct answer ✔✔ ~Is the author losing money b/c their work was
copied?
"misappropriation/piracy"- gaining unauthorized benefits from someone else's work
~Transformative uses also protected by this (Cambpell v. Acuff-Rose case is "fair use" b/c original
work was so far transformed)
In FAIR USE CASES claiming infringement, the PLAINTIFF must Prove... - correct answer ✔✔ 1.
Ownership of the copyrighted work
2. The exclusive rights to that work (reproduce/perform publicly, etc.) were infringed upon
3. Certainty that the work was copied
~DEFENDANT had unauthorized access to the work
~The work is substantially similar to the PLAINTIFF's original work
In FAIR USE CASES claiming infringement, the PLAINTIFF must Prove... EXAMPLE - correct
answer ✔✔ Court issued injunction against the film "Great White" b/c plotline was extremely
similar to JAWS, which came out three years prior
FAIR USE CASES: Harper and Row v. Nation Enterprises (1985) -informational work - correct
answer ✔✔ ~WHAT: Former President Gerald Ford signed deal w/TIME magazine to publish his
memoirs; Before TIME could release publication, an unauthorized source released his
manuscript to "The Nation" magazine; Harper and Row sue "The Nation" for publishing the
copyrighted work (infringement) The District Court held that The Nation's use of the