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Intellectual property rights are legal entitlements given to the creators of artistic works, granting them exclusive legal discretion in how their work is used, including the right to duplicate it or to charge a monetary fee for use. For example, the authors of novels have a copyright on their work, which gives them the right to make copies or to sell the novel to a publisher. Composers of songs hold a similar copyright. Inventors can obtain a patent on an invention, allowing them to collect royalties from companies that wish to sell a product that uses the idea of the patent. These legal rights, as well as limitation to them (in time and scope) are embedded in national and international intellectual property rights law. In the past, violators of intellectual property rights law faced several hurdles:
Information technology has cleared many of these hurdles and added new twists to the legal questions of intellectual property rights. Many related laws are being reexamined and modified to deal with issues regarding information technology. Why has information technology changed the legal landscape?
Note that copied digital data is a perfect replica of the original digital data, but not of the original work itself—unless the original was digital to begin with. For example, a painting can be digitized into a computer image, but when printed it will not have the original's texture, smell, or feel. In addition, in order to save space (or bandwidth), digital art collectors often use compression techniques that are "lossy," meaning the digital data loses some small amount of information (the trade-off is a much smaller file). For example, an MP3 music file or a JPEG image file might be ten times smaller than the original source data, but it may also suffer at least 10% loss in quality. Of course, as computer memory and bandwidth become larger and cost less, data size is not as big an issue. Here are some specific examples:
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If you encounter technical errors, contact computing@calvin.edu. |