Robert L. McDonald Northwestern University Prepared by Mark Cassano Copyright 2009‚ Pearson Prentice Hall. All Rights Reserved. Executive Editor: Donna Battista Assistant Development Editor: Sara Holliday Production Editor: Heather McNally Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education‚ Inc.‚ Upper Saddle River‚ New Jersey‚ 07458. Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. This publication is protected by copyright and permission should be obtained from the publisher prior to any prohibited
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Second is Intellectual property. Intellectual property (IP) is a legal term that refers to creations of the mind such as musical‚ literary‚ and artistic works; inventions; and symbols‚ names‚ images‚ and designs used in commerce‚ including copyrights‚ trademarks‚ patents‚ and related rights. Under intellectual property law‚ the holder of one of these abstract "properties" has certain exclusive rights to the creative work‚ commercial symbol‚ or invention‚ which is covered by it. The best and
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Chetan Bhagat‚ you would be entitled to read the book or sell it or giving it away but you would not be entitled to make photocopies of the book and then sell those copies. Those rights are retained by the author of the book and are protected by the copyright law. Intellectual property is a field of law that aims at protecting original ideas‚ the knowledge created through human effort in order to stimulate and promote further creativity. Authors who write books and musicians who compose songs would be
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The Commons and Copyright There is a debate about the copyright has been raised‚ especially in the modern society that let the information could be spread much more easily. The current trend of copyright is pretty strict‚ which forbids people gather information from books or internet unless they paid for it. However‚ the opposite opinion exists‚ which is The Commons that believes the knowledge belongs to all humanity to inspire innovation that has not been created. Marilyn Diptych Link: https://www
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References: Cheshire Henbury (2008). E-Business Definitions (B2B‚ B2C‚ etc.). Copyright 2001‚ Cheshire Henbury‚ Created by Paul T © 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 LitLangs All Rights Reserved. Retrieved March 10‚ 2008 from http://www.ecommerce-digest.com/ecommerce-security- issues.html Internet World Stats (2008‚ March 1) 2008
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United States History 2002 AP® UNITED STATES HISTORY FREE-RESPONSE QUESTIONS (Form B) UNITED STATES HISTORY SECTION II Part A (Suggested writing time—45 minutes) Percent of Section II score—45 Directions: The following question requires you to construct a coherent essay that integrates your interpretation of Documents A-I and your knowledge of the period referred to in the question. High scores will be earned only by essays that both cite key pieces of evidence from the documents and
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Behavior Plan Template Use this template to create behavioral plans for assignments in Weeks Two and Three. Fill in each section and provide additional information as needed. Client Identifying Information List all pertinent and known identifying information.NameOnurAge25GenderMaleReligionUnknownHistory Describe all pertinent and known history.MedicalOnur has urges to steal and gets a thrill from stealing.FamilyOnur stole items and cash from his parents and grandparents. Onur was reported as a runaway
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technology allowed users to share MP3 files with other logged in users of Napster via the internet. While it gained popularity for music sharing‚ it attracted the attention of the music industry accusing Napster for breaching plaintiff rights and copyright violations which saw them facing law suits from artists like Dr. Dre ‚ music companies like EMI‚ BMG. In July 2001‚ after an intense battle with the recording companies Napster had to shut down its operation in order to comply with the injunction
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Sections 501 and 506 protects the music and if downloaded illegally may leave you civilly and criminally liable. This includes jail time as well as up to a $250‚000 fine. According to RIAA the No Electronic Theft law (NET Act) is similar to the copyright law. This law targets those that target digital recordings. · Criminal penalties can run up to five years in prison and/or $250‚000 in fines‚ even if you didn’t do it for monetary or financial or commercial gain. · If you did
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Intellectual property is the right to protect inventions‚ literary and artistic works‚ symbols‚ names‚ and images that come from the mind. Intellectual property laws give individuals the exclusive rights to patent his/her own ideas. In the article "Copyright Crusaders" by: David Gibson‚ David Gibson talks about three claimants who all copyrighted their versions of the same idea. The idea was the "footprints in the sand." The poem is a soft-focus retrospective that imagines life as a walk on the beach
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