Leadership Laboratory
- Leadership Lab: Intellectual Property Series
This series of essays can help the IT manager learn how to identify and protect intellectual property and intangible assets.
Trademark Infringement - The Likelihood of Confusion - Updated October 27th, 2008
Valuation of Intellectual Property Case Study - IPWatchdog.com -
What is Intellectual Property - March 14th, 2007
Creative Commons and Intellectual Property - May 1st, 2007
What Is a Patent? - April 7th, 2007
Copyright - April 7th, 2007
Digital Rights Management - April 7th, 2007
Trademark and Brand - April 7th, 2007
Trade Secrets - April 7th, 2007
The Value of IP - April 7th, 2007
Licensing and Franchising - April 3rd, 2007
10 Steps to Protect IP - March 13th, 2007
Copyright
April 7th, 2007
By Stephen Northcutt
"Copyright is a form of protection provided to the authors of original works of authorship including literary, dramatic, musical, artistic, and certain other intellectual works, both published and unpublished. The 1976 Copyright Act generally gives the owner of copyright the exclusive right to reproduce the copyrighted work, to prepare derivative work, to distribute copies or phonorecords of the copyrighted work, to perform the copyrighted work publicly, or to display the copyrighted work publicly."1 Copyrights, like patents and trademarks, are a public claim of ownership and offer limited monopoly power over intellectual property. The copyright protects the form of expression rather than the subject matter of the writing. For example, a description of a machine could be copyrighted, but this would only prevent others from copying the description; it would not prevent others from writing a description of their own or from making and using the machine. Protection is limited to the particular expression of an idea, process, or concept in a specific form. However, copyright protects others from deriving new work based on the original. Fair use provisions of the copyright law allow for the limited use of copyrighted materials without the author's permission for specific purposes.The primary law governing copyrights internationally is the WIPO Copyright Treaty2, upon which over 50 countries have agreed.
History of copyright
"Copyright law all started with the 'The Statute of Anne,' the world's first copyright law passed by the British Parliament in 1709. Yet the principle of protecting the rights of artists predates this."3In the US, "the First Congress implemented the copyright provision of the U.S. Constitution in 1790. The Copyright Act of 1790, An Act for the Encouragement of Learning, by Securing the Copies of Maps, Charts, and Books to the Authors and Proprietors of Such Copies, was modeled on the Statute of Anne (1710). It granted American authors the right to print, re-print, or publish their work for a period of fourteen years and to renew for another fourteen. The law was meant to provide an incentive to authors, artists, and scientists to create original works by providing creators with a monopoly. At the same time, the monopoly was limited in order to stimulate creativity and the advancement of 'science and the useful arts' through wide public access to works in the 'public domain.'"4
The Berne Convention
The goals of the Berne Convention provided the basis for mutual recognition of copyright between sovereign nations and promoted the development of international norms in copyright protection. European nations established a mutually satisfactory uniform copyright law to replace the need for separate registration in every country. The treaty has been revised five times since 1886.5
GIAC Note: We recommend the Creative Commons section to be non-testable; it is new and may not be JTA worthy, but we thought our students should be aware of it.
Creative Commons
"The Berne convention requires that every work is automatically considered copyrighted and receive full copyright protection. That is what created the need for the Creative Commons licences in the first place. If works were not fully protected by default then there would be no need for CC licences in most cases."6 Creative Commons is an alternative to traditional copyright, developed by a nonprofit organization of the same name. By default, most original works are protected by copyright, which confers specific rights regarding use and distribution. Creative Commons allows copyright owners to release some of those rights while retaining others, with the goal of increasing access to and sharing of intellectual property.7
Application of copyright information for an information assurance manager
- Anything and everything on the Internet is likely to be copied. Strong organizational controls over what information is placed on Internet facing systems is advised
- Organizations with a vast amount of Internet facing information such as The SANS Institute need to invest in an intellectual property incident handling capability to detect and respond to infringement
- Adobe pdfs security can be defeated trivially
- All known ebook implementations can be broken given sufficient time
- European nations, especially Scandinavian, are beginning to question whether copyright is valid as a concept
- Within the US, the DMCA yields quick and effective results and polite take down notices work just as well as harsh ones
1 http://www.uspto.gov/web/offices/pac/doc/general/whatis.htm
2 http://www.wipo.int/copyright/en/
3 http://www.riaa.com/issues/copyright/history.asp
4 http://www.arl.org/pp/ppcopyright/copyresources/copytimeline.shtml
5 http://news.com.com/5208-1030_3-0.html?forumID=1&threadID=20696&messageID=179846&start=-1
6 http://www.educause.edu/LibraryDetailPage/666?ID=ELI7023
7 http://www.sans.org