Copyright: Difference between revisions

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''see also: [[Information]]''<br>
{{a|ip|{{wmc|Copyright.jpg|}}}}{{d|Copyright|/ˈkɒpɪrʌɪt/|n|}}
===On the distinction between copyright and [[confidence]]===
A proprietary right that arises at law as a result of a human exercising her ''creative powers''. Though of course laws are necessarily local and there is not yet, a Team America World Police to keep right thinking people on the straight and narrow worldwide, there is a curious amount of international harmony amongst legislators so the same rights accrue in most — not ''all'' — places. You don’t need to pay for it, register it or claim it: it just arises as a consequence of you being creative.  
The key thing is to distinguish between [[breach of copyright]] and [[breach of confidence]].
 
====Breach of copyright====
Though claiming it is probably sensible if you ever want to enforce your rights to it.  
Copyright subsists in the particular articulation of the information, rather than in the information per se. To breach of copyright is to deny a copyright owner the commercial benefit of its creation: e.g., by accessing for free something the copyright owner wants you to pay for. In other words:
*I ''can’t'' copy ''Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone'' without J.K. Rowling’s permission;
*But I ''can'' tell you the plot.
====Breach of confidence====
Breach of confidence is less about the ''form'' of the information and more about the ''content'': If I have signed a [[confidentiality agreement]] I can copy confidential information to my heart’s content, as long as I only use it within the bounds of the licence I have been granted. In other words as long as I don’t disclose the ''substantive content'' of that information to anyone else. Here the forbidden action is “telling you the plot”: I could do that either by:
*Giving you a full copy of the material
*Telling you the plot without copying anything at all.  
Breach of confidence is where the real compliance issues lie because it implies –
*The Information that is non-public: therefore there are significant market abuse, insider dealing issues;
*It is the substantive content and not the particular form of the information that is valuable.
===Examples===
===Examples===
====Investor presentation materials====
====Investor presentation materials====
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Commercially published articles (also index outputs and so on) present:
Commercially published articles (also index outputs and so on) present:
*a '''real risk''' of copyright infringement: here the very business motivation for creating them is that people who read them will be prepared to pay for them  
*a '''real risk''' of copyright infringement: here the very business motivation for creating them is that people who read them will be prepared to pay for them  
*a '''low risk''' of breach of confidence: By definition this information is in the public domain – anyone who wants to pay for it can have it.
*a '''low risk''' of breach of confidence: By definition, this information is in the public domain – anyone who wants to pay for it can have it.


{{seealso}}
{{sa}}
*[[Confidence]]
*[[Confidence]]
*[[Confidentiality agreement]]
*[[Confidentiality agreement]]
*[[Email signoff]]
*[[Email signoff]]
*[[Information]]

Latest revision as of 09:17, 28 August 2024

JC sounds off™ on Intellectual Property©
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Copyright
/ˈkɒpɪrʌɪt/ (n.)
A proprietary right that arises at law as a result of a human exercising her creative powers. Though of course laws are necessarily local and there is not yet, a Team America World Police to keep right thinking people on the straight and narrow worldwide, there is a curious amount of international harmony amongst legislators so the same rights accrue in most — not all — places. You don’t need to pay for it, register it or claim it: it just arises as a consequence of you being creative.

Though claiming it is probably sensible if you ever want to enforce your rights to it.

Examples

Investor presentation materials

These present:

  • a low risk of copyright infringement (even if you do “breach copyright”, who is going to sue you and what would their loss be?)
  • a fairly low risk of breach of confidence (I guess you might violate securities laws by distributing materials in certain places)
  • a fairly low risk from a market abuse perspective (by its nature investor materials are designed as a pitch to outsiders – and in those IBD scenarios where it might not be, you would be confi’d up to kingdom come anyway.

FT and Bloomberg articles

Commercially published articles (also index outputs and so on) present:

  • a real risk of copyright infringement: here the very business motivation for creating them is that people who read them will be prepared to pay for them
  • a low risk of breach of confidence: By definition, this information is in the public domain – anyone who wants to pay for it can have it.

See also