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zakruti.com » Knowledge, science, education » Crash Course
Copyright Basics: Crash Course Intellectual Property 2

Copyright Basics: Crash Course Intellectual Property 2

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Rating: 4.0; Vote: 1
EPISODE DESCRIPTION This week, Stan Muller teaches you the basics of copyright in the United States. Copyright law is territorial, so we're going to cover the system we know the most about, and that's the US. Stan will talk about what kind of ideas can be copyrighted, who can get a copyright, and what protections the copyright grants. We'll also talk about the always contentious and seemingly ever-growing term of copyright. Stan will also teach you about the low bar for creativity, which means that original work doesn't have to be all that original, and he'll also touch on the problems with copyright in the modern world. The Magic 8 Ball is a registered trademark of the Mattel corporation
Date: 2022-04-04

Comments and reviews: 10


8: 26 - -They get these rights at the moment the work is created. --Authors don't have to register their works to be protected--, but there are benefits to registration. For example, --authors can't go to federal court to enforce their copyright unless they've registered it--. -
Ay? How does that work? If you're not registered, how can you simultaneously -be protected- and yet not be able to actually enforce the copyright those protections (supposedly) grant?

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There are financial agreements which have 99 year terms as part of their agreements as such 100 year protections don't seem to me unreasonable aside from this human life spans in developed nations are near 100 years in some places, so if a person is to make a living off of their work during the course of their lives then maybe these time spans can be considered reasonable
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I would like a ruling that, as Congress is granted the right to allow copyrights for a limited time, that if copyright terms are longer than the average lifespan of an American at the time of creation, it should fall into the public domain no longer than that. The average copyright shouldn't be around longer than the average person.
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I am a law student studying copyright and from my understanding of the law this video is fantastically done. Highly accurate, incredibly comprehensive for a ten minute video, well organized, interesting.
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VERY SPECIFIC QUESTION: I want to make BT21 merch, but am I allowed to? Say I want to make a phone case, if I DRAW a character myself but it looks like the original character, will I get sued?
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if I write a book and put images in it. How do I copyright it. And can I add rules so no one else could use the same images to take from my book and sell it. to others
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About works made for hire, the person who created that idea, do they not only get rewarded with money but do they still receive credit? if not, I think it is not fair.
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I think it is extremely very long. It can be like medical parents 15 years or digital 7 years. That it. Any Creator should keep the rights more than this.
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It's too long, and in-fact: I feel like works for hire should only last half as long: since companies can always hire more workers, but there's only one you
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Is Stan like related to the Green brothers in anyway? He literally looks like John's older brother. He resembles John more than Hank does!
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