Copyrights and Related Rights Sample Clauses

Copyrights and Related Rights. Copyrights provide creators of artistic and literary works with exclusive rights to reproduce, publicly perform and display, and distribute their works. Debate exists over balancing copyrights and the free flow of information, and digital trade raises new issues. USMCA includes:  Copyright terms of life plus 70 years, or 70 years from publication for most works, higher than the TRIPS minimum term of life plus 50 years.  Civil and criminal penalties for circumventing technological protection measures, such as digital locks.  “Safe harbors” to allow legitimate online internet intermediaries to develop their business while providing enforcement against digital copyright infringement.
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Copyrights and Related Rights. 7.1. Violating Copyrights and Related Rights of the Developer may result in civil and criminal liability of the entity violating these rights.
Copyrights and Related Rights. Part II Section 1 (Article 9 to Article 14) of the TRIPS agreement deals with the minimum standard in respect of copyrights. Copyright is a right given by the law to creators of literary, dramatic, musical and artistic works and producers of cinematograph films and sound recordings. It is a bundle of rights including, inter alia, rights of reproduction, communication to the public, adaptation and translation of the work. There could be slight variations in the composition of the rights depending on the work. The Copyright Act, 1957 protects original literary, dramatic, musical and artistic works and cinematograph films and sound recordings from unauthorized use. Unlike the case with patents, copyright protects the expressions and not the ideas. There is no copyright in an idea. The general rule is that a copyright lasts for 60 years. In the case of original literary, dramatic, musical and artistic works the 60-year period is counted from the year following the death of the author. In the case of cinematograph films, sound recordings, photographs, posthumous publications, anonymous and pseudonymous publications, works of government and works of international organizations, the 60-year period is counted from the date of publication. The Copyright Act, 1957 came into effect from January 1958. This Act has been amended five times since then, i.e., in 1983, 1984, 1992, 1994 and 1999, with the amendment of 1994 being the most substantial. The Copyright Act, 1957 continues with the common law traditions. Developments elsewhere have brought about a certain degree of convergence in copyright regimes in the developed world. The Copyright Act is compliant with most international conventions and treaties in the field of copyrights. India is a member of the Berne Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic Works of 1886 (as modified at Paris in 1971), and the Universal Copyright Convention of 1951. Though India is not a member of the Rome Convention of 1961, the Copyright Act, 1957 is fully compliant with the Rome Convention provisions. Two new treaties, collectively termed as Internet Treaties, were negotiated in 1996 under the auspices of the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO). These treaties are called the ‘WIPO Copyrights Treaty (WCT)’ and the ‘WIPO Performances and Phonograms Treaty (WPPT)’. These treaties were negotiated essentially to provide for the protection of the rights of copyright holders, performers and producers of phonograms in ...
Copyrights and Related Rights. The present License Agreement does not grant any intellectual property rights in the VR Eclipse Experience to The Operator. BACKLIGHT, hereby certifying being the sole owner of the Copyrights and Related Rights of the VR Eclipse Experience, remains the sole and exclusive owner thereof.
Copyrights and Related Rights. 1. In connection with the performance of the Agreement and in connection with the remuneration specified in § 7 paragraph 1 of this Agreement, the Contractor transfers onto the Contracting authority, without time constraints and area constraints, at the moment of delivering the subject matter of the Agreement, all copyrights and the exclusive right to authorise the usage of related rights to the works (in the meaning of the provisions of the Act on Copyright and Related Rights of February 4 1994 (Journal of Laws from 2018, item 1191, as amended, hereinafter referred to as the "Act") created in connection with the subject matter of the Agreement (hereinafter referred to as the "Works"), on all fields of utilisation specified in the article 50 of this Agreement, particularly: 1) copying and multiplying of the Works (including entering into computer's memory or any other device), manufacturing Works using any technologies, including printing, reprographics, digital, mechanical, optical, electronic or any other recording using analogue or digital technology, in any system standard or in any form; on any media, including audio and video, paper or similar, photosensitive, digital, optical, discs, memory sticks, computer drives and any other memory drives. 2) any trading of the original and copies of the Works manufactured in accordance with the subclause 1) of this paragraph – placing on the market, leasing, rental or conveying to use on the basis of another legal relationship. 3) any other distribution of the Works, especially: a) any public broadcasting of the Works in such a manner that anyone could be able to access them in the space and time selected, including through the terrestrial and satellite networks, cable, telecommunications and multimedia networks, databases, servers or any other devices and systems, including the ones provided by third parties', in open and closed circulation, in any technology, system or format, with or without the possibility of recording, as well as in the services specified in subclause a), b) any public playback, displaying, performing or broadcasting of the Works. 4) In the area of inserting the Works into the memory of a computer and information networks (the Internet). 2. Along with the transfer of the copyrights and related rights to the Works, the Contractor – due to the remuneration specified in § 7 paragraph 1 of this Agreement – transfers onto the Contracting authority the ownership right to the medium on which the W...
Copyrights and Related Rights. 9.1. All copyrights and related rights for the records of classes, educational and information materials (video, text, etc.), which became to be known to the Customer during the training according to the course program, belong to the Contractor, the Customer has a right to use them only for its personal purposes. 9.2. The Customer is not entitled without the written consent of the Contractor to transfer the access to the obtained records, educational and information materials to any third parties, to publish, to reproduce publicly by any method and in any form, to duplicate, copy or to use them for commercial purposes.
Copyrights and Related Rights. The Contractor declares that he will be entitled to proprietary copyrights and subsidiary rights to all works that will be created as a result of the performance of the Agreement. As part of the remuneration referred to in § 3 sec. 1, on the date of signing the final acceptance protocol by the Ordering Party, the Contractor transfers to the Ordering Party the proprietary copyrights and the right to authorize the exercise of derivative copyrights to works created under the Agreement (hereinafter: Works), in the fields of use indicated in paragraph 3 below. The transfer of proprietary copyrights and subsidiary rights to the Works covers the following fields of use: as regards the recording and reproduction of the Work - permanent or temporary reproduction of the computer program in whole or in part by any means and in any form, in the scope of disseminating the Work - dissemination, including marketing, lending or renting a computer program or a copy thereof, the copyrights to the Work other than the software, in particular to the Technical Documentation, are transferred to the following fields of use: in the field of recording and reproducing the Work - producing copies of the Work by any technique, in terms of trading in the original or copies on which the Work has been recorded - marketing, lending or renting the Work, in the scope of disseminating the work in a different way than in the previous point - public performance, exhibition, e.g. for presentation at a fair, display, playback, broadcasting via vision or audio and rebroadcasting, entering into computer memory and the Internet, and also making the Work publicly available in such a way that everyone can have access to it at a place and time chosen by them, in the scope of creating intellectual property objects based on the Work - using the Work to create a trademark and other industrial property objects and to create a separate work or combine with a separate work. With the transfer to the Ordering Party of the right to authorize the exercise of derivative copyrights to the Works, the Ordering Party shall be given the exclusive right to authorize the exercise of derivative copyright. With the transfer to the Ordering Party of the proprietary and subsidiary copyrights to the Work being the software, the proprietary and dependent copyrights to the Source Codes relating to the said software are transferred to the Ordering Party on the same terms. The Contractor guarantees that the Works produced by th...
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Copyrights and Related Rights 

Related to Copyrights and Related Rights

  • COPYRIGHTS AND LICENSES § 7.1 The Architect and the Owner warrant that in transmitting Instruments of Service, or any other information, the transmitting party is the copyright owner of such information or has permission from the copyright owner to transmit such information for its use on the Project. § 7.2 The Architect and the Architect’s consultants shall be deemed the authors and owners of their respective Instruments of Service, including the Drawings and Specifications, and shall retain all common law, statutory and other reserved rights, including copyrights. Submission or distribution of Instruments of Service to meet official regulatory requirements or for similar purposes in connection with the Project is not to be construed as publication in derogation of the reserved rights of the Architect and the Architect’s consultants. § 7.3 The Architect grants to the Owner a nonexclusive license to use the Architect’s Instruments of Service solely and exclusively for purposes of constructing, using, maintaining, altering and adding to the Project, provided that the Owner substantially performs its obligations under this Agreement, including prompt payment of all sums due pursuant to Article 9 and Article 11. The Architect shall obtain similar nonexclusive licenses from the Architect’s consultants consistent with this Agreement. The license granted under this section permits the Owner to authorize the Contractor, Subcontractors, Sub-subcontractors, and suppliers, as well as the Owner’s consultants and separate contractors, to reproduce applicable portions of the Instruments of Service, subject to any protocols established pursuant to Section 1.3, solely and exclusively for use in performing services or construction for the Project. If the Architect rightfully terminates this Agreement for cause as provided in Section 9.4, the license granted in this Section 7.3 shall terminate. § 7.3.1 In the event the Owner uses the Instruments of Service without retaining the authors of the Instruments of Service, the Owner releases the Architect and Architect’s consultant(s) from all claims and causes of action arising from such uses. The Owner, to the extent permitted by law, further agrees to indemnify and hold harmless the Architect and its consultants from all costs and expenses, including the cost of defense, related to claims and causes of action asserted by any third person or entity to the extent such costs and expenses arise from the Owner’s use of the Instruments of Service under this Section 7.3.1. The terms of this Section 7.3.1 shall not apply if the Owner rightfully terminates this Agreement for cause under Section 9.4. § 7.4 Except for the licenses granted in this Article 7, no other license or right shall be deemed granted or implied under this Agreement. The Owner shall not assign, delegate, sublicense, pledge or otherwise transfer any license granted herein to another party without the prior written agreement of the Architect. Any unauthorized use of the Instruments of Service shall be at the Owner’s sole risk and without liability to the Architect and the Architect’s consultants. § 7.5 Except as otherwise stated in Section 7.3, the provisions of this Article 7 shall survive the termination of this Agreement.

  • Copyrights and Trademarks The Client represents to Developer and unconditionally guarantees that any elements of text, graphics, photos, designs, trademarks, or other artwork furnished to Developer for inclusion in web pages are owned by the Client, or that the Client has permission from the rightful owner to use each of these elements, and will hold harmless, protect, and defend Developer and its subcontractors from any claim or suit arising from the use of such elements furnished by the Client.

  • Copyrights and Patents When the RECIPIENT creates any copyrightable materials or invents any patentable property under this Agreement, the RECIPIENT may copyright or patent the same but ECOLOGY retains a royalty free, nonexclusive, and irrevocable license to reproduce, publish, recover, or otherwise use the material(s) or property, and to authorize others to use the same for federal, state, or local government purposes.

  • Other Patents and Copyrights 15 5.7 Remedies ................................................... 16

  • Patents and Copyrights ‌ All services, information, computer program elements, reports and other deliverables which might be patented or copyrighted and created under this Contract are the property of the Department and shall not be used or released by the Consultant or any other person except with the prior written approval by the Department.

  • Patents, Trademarks, Copyrights and Licenses All patents, patent applications, trademarks, trademark applications, service marks, service xxxx applications, copyrights, copyright applications, design rights, tradenames, assumed names, trade secrets and licenses owned or utilized by any Borrower are set forth on Schedule 5.9, are valid and have been duly registered or filed with all appropriate Governmental Bodies and constitute all of the intellectual property rights which are necessary for the operation of its business; there is no objection to or pending challenge to the validity of any such patent, trademark, copyright, design rights, tradename, trade secret or license and no Borrower is aware of any grounds for any challenge, except as set forth in Schedule 5.9 hereto. Each patent, patent application, patent license, trademark, trademark application, trademark license, service xxxx, service xxxx application, service xxxx license, design rights, copyright, copyright application and copyright license owned or held by any Borrower and all trade secrets used by any Borrower consist of original material or property developed by such Borrower or was lawfully acquired by such Borrower from the proper and lawful owner thereof. Each of such items has been maintained so as to preserve the value thereof from the date of creation or acquisition thereof. With respect to all software used by any Borrower, such Borrower is in possession of all source and object codes related to each piece of software or is the beneficiary of a source code escrow agreement, each such source code escrow agreement being listed on Schedule 5.9 hereto.

  • Trademarks, Patents and Copyrights (a) Section 4.14(a) of the Company Disclosure Letter sets forth a complete and accurate list of all copyright registrations, trademark registrations, and patents, and applications for registration of any of the foregoing, that are owned by the Company or its subsidiaries. The Company and its subsidiaries own or have the right to use in the manner currently used by the Company and its subsidiaries all patents, trademarks, trade names, copyrights, Internet domain names, service marks, trade secrets and other intellectual property rights (the “Intellectual Property Rights”) used in connection with the business of the Company and its subsidiaries as currently conducted (the “Company Intellectual Property Rights”), except as would not have, and would not reasonably be expected to have, individually or in the aggregate, a Company Material Adverse Effect. Neither the Company nor any of its subsidiaries has received, since January 1, 2011, any written charge, complaint, claim, demand or notice challenging the validity of any of the Company Intellectual Property Rights, except as would not have, and would not reasonably be expected to have, individually or in the aggregate, a Company Material Adverse Effect. (b) To the Company’s knowledge, the conduct of the business of the Company and its subsidiaries does not infringe upon, misappropriate or otherwise violate any Intellectual Property Rights of any other person, except for any such infringement, misappropriation or other violation that would not have, and would not reasonably be expected to have, individually or in the aggregate, a Company Material Adverse Effect. Neither the Company nor any of its subsidiaries has received, since January 1, 2011, any written charge, complaint, claim, demand or notice alleging any such infringement, misappropriation or other violation that has not been settled or otherwise fully resolved, except for any such infringement, misappropriation or other violation that would not have, and would not reasonably be expected to have, individually or in the aggregate, a Company Material Adverse Effect. To the Company’s knowledge, no other person has infringed, misappropriated or otherwise violated any Company Intellectual Property Rights since January 1, 2011, except for any such infringement, misappropriation or other violation as would not have, and would not reasonably be expected to have, individually or in the aggregate, a Company Material Adverse Effect.

  • Copyrights As to any deliverables containing copyrightable subject matter, the Contractor agrees that upon their creation, such deliverables shall be considered as work made-for-hire by the Contractor for the City and the City shall own all copyrights in and to such deliverables, provided however, that nothing in this Paragraph 38 shall negate the City’s sole or joint ownership of any such deliverables arising by virtue of the City’s sole or joint authorship of such deliverables. Should by operation of law, such deliverables not be considered works made-for-hire, the Contractor hereby assigns to the City (and agrees to cause each of its employees providing services to the City hereunder to execute, acknowledge, and deliver an assignment to the City of) all worldwide right, title, and interest in and to such deliverables. With respect to such work made- for-hire, the Contractor agrees to execute, acknowledge, and deliver and cause each of its employees providing services to the City hereunder to execute, acknowledge, and deliver a work- made-for-hire agreement, in a form to be reasonably approved by the City, to the City upon delivery of such deliverables to the City or at such other time as the City may request.

  • Copyrights, Patents and Trademarks (i) Borrower hereby represents and warrants that, as of the date of this Agreement, Borrower does not have any maskworks, computer software, or other copyrights, that are registered (or are the subject of any application for registration) with the United States Copyright Office. Borrower hereby covenants and agrees that Borrower will NOT register with the United States Copyright Office (or apply for such registration of) any of Borrower’s maskworks, computer software, or other copyrights, unless Borrower has provided Lender not less than 30 days prior written notice of the commencement of such registration/application and Borrower has executed and delivered to Lender such security agreement(s) and other documentation (in form and substance reasonably satisfactory to Lender) which Lender in its good faith business judgment may require for filing with the United States Copyright Office with respect to such registration or application. (ii) Borrower will identify to Lender in writing any and all patents and trademarks of Borrower that are registered (or the subject of any application for registration) with the United States Patent and Trademark Office and, upon Lender’s request therefor, promptly execute and deliver to Lender such security agreement(s) and other documentation (in form and substance reasonably satisfactory to Lender) which Lender in its good faith business judgment may require for filing with the United States Patent and Trademark Office with respect to such registration or application. (iii) Borrower will: (x) protect, defend and maintain the validity and enforceability of Borrower’s copyrights, patents, and trademarks; (y) promptly advise Lender in writing of material infringements of Borrower’s copyrights, patents, or trademarks of which Borrower is or becomes aware; and (z) not allow any material item of Borrower’s copyrights, patents, or trademarks to be abandoned, forfeited or dedicated to the public without Lender’s written consent.

  • Trademark Rights Any and all past, present or future rights in, to and ---------------- associated with the Trademarks throughout the world, whether arising under federal law, state law, common law, foreign law or otherwise, including the following: all such rights arising out of or associated with the Trademark Registrations; the right (but not the obligation) to register claims under any state, federal or foreign trademark law or regulation; the right (but not the obligation) to xxx or bring opposition or cancellation proceedings in the name of the Assignor or the Agent for any and all past, present and future infringements or dilution of or any other damages or injury to the Trademarks, the Trademark Rights, or the Associated Goodwill, and the rights to damages or profits due or accrued arising out of or in connection with any such past, present or future infringement, dilution, damage or injury; and the Trademark License Rights.

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