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Copyrights

Copyright, is a bundle of
rights, which grants protection to the unique expression of ideas.
Ideas per se cannot be protected; it is the expression of ideas in a
material medium that is the subject matter of copyright protection.
Copyright is a negative right and the owner of a copyright gets the
right to prevent others from copying his work without his consent
towards a commercial end. However, at the same time it gives to the
author an exclusive right for the commercial exploitation of his
work.
The domain of copyright extends to original literary (which
includes computer programmes) dramatic, musical, artistic,
cinematographic films and sound recording. Copyright assumes supreme
importance for authors, artists, architects, composers, music
production companies and producers, film production companies,
computer programmers and designers. An author, an artist, a composer
or a designer looks forward to the commercial benefits accruing from
his work, apart from the intellectual satisfaction derived from
creating the work. Many a times, unscrupulous traders copy best
sellers, or produce pirated versions of a hit-movie or chart topping
sound track and sell it at a price that is just a fraction of the
original work. This in turn, eats into the commercial benefits that
the author of an original work rightly expects and deserves.
Copyright law comes in here and secures the interests of the author,
punishes the infringer and thus provides incentive to the creation
of original works. A copyright can be transferred or can be assigned
or licensed for a consideration. Copyright, unlike the other
Intellectual Property rights does not require any formal procedures
as such and affords protection during the lifetime of the author and
sixty-years thereafter.

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