INTRODUCTION Privacy is the claim of individuals to be left alone‚ free from surveillance or interference from other individuals‚ organizations. Claim to be able to control information about yourself. Intellectual property is an intangible property of any kind created by individuals or corporations. BODY Contemporary information systems technology‚ including internet technologies‚ challenges traditional regimens for protecting individual privacy and intellectual property. Data storage
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Introduction What is intellectual property? In its common and purest sense‚ it is the tangible product of human mind and intelligence entitled to the legal status of personal property. As Chaffe stated‚ ‘The man who brings out of nothingness some child of his thought has right s therein which cannot belong to any other sort of property’. One textbook defines the intellectual property as ‘the novel product of human intellectual endeavour’. Yet‚ the use of the term ‘property’ to describe intellectual products
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What is INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY? Intellectual property (IP) is a legal concept which refers to creations of the mind for which exclusive rights are recognized. Under intellectual property law‚ owners are granted certain exclusive rights to a variety of intangible assets‚ such as musical‚ literary‚ and artistic works; discoveries and inventions; and words‚ phrases‚ symbols‚ and designs. Common types of intellectual property rights include copyright‚ trademarks‚ patents‚ industrial design rights‚ trade
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Intellectual Property Kiara Rubenstein Intellectual Property (IP) is legal rights that result from intellectual activity in the industrial‚ scientific‚ literary‚ and artistic fields. The four major components of intellectual property include; patent‚ copyright‚ industrial design‚ and trademark. A patent is a government grant giving the right to eliminate others from making‚ using or selling an invention. A Canadian patent is protection within Canada for 20 years from the date of filing of the
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Although Intellectual property can be catorigized under many aspects‚ not every idea the mind can think is included. The legal definition of intellectual property often abbreviated IP is ideas‚ inventions‚ artistic works‚ songs‚ business processes etc. In general terms is any commercialily viable product created out of a persons mental processes. The Coca Cola company for example has legal ownership of several factories‚ bottling equipment‚ trucks for transporting their product and the actual ingredient
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1. Intellectual property refers to the legal section of an idea. It allows businesses and the owners‚ innovators and creators to have their work protected and to prevent it from being copied. There are different ways you can protect your intellectual property: copyright‚ trademarks and patents. 2. It is important to protect your rights to intellectual property as it stops people from stealing or copying the names of your products or brands; your inventions; the design or look of your products; things
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Time does fly so fast that today’s innovation is inclusive. With these innovations‚ some creates originally and some just imitates these originals. And with the intellectual property law‚ owners are granted certain exclusive rights to a variety of intangible assets. As a student of Information Technology with Specialization in Digital Arts‚ I program a website and create a digital art. We create new concept in websites‚ illustrations‚ and movies which makes us the owner of these assets that we need
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Intellectual property is the property generated in the process of intellectual activities. It can be possessed and used‚ and generated benefits. The major components of intellectual property include copyrights‚ patents‚ and trademarks. Similar to tangible property‚ intellectual property which is an intangible property is also protected by the law. The governments and parliaments have given the creators the rights as an incentive to produce ideas that will benefit society as a whole‚ by preventing
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of Facts (a seminar on the nature of fact-finding); Civil Pretrial Techniques; Terrorism and the Law; Star Trek and the Law First Year Enrichment Series; Freedom of Speech; strong interest in Federal Criminal Law‚ International Criminal Law‚ and Privacy and the Law University of Pittsburgh‚ School of Law‚ Pittsburgh‚ Pennsylvania Welsh S. White Distinguished Visiting Professor of Law August 2008-May 2009 Subjects Taught: Free Speech‚ Evidence‚ Criminal Law Duke University School of Law‚ Durham‚ N
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The Information technology industry‚ where nothing is predictable and constant change has become a usual trend‚ is now on its new phase of its evolution stages. According to Richard L. Nolan‚ MBA Class of 1942 Professor of Business Administration: “Information Technology is no longer being used as just a tactical resource‚ it’s now fundamentally influencing business strategy and competition” (http://www.alumni.hbs.edu/bulletin/1997/april/text/theory_text.html 04.02.06). This paper will examine and
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