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There is an international copyright accord known as the Berne Convention (http://www.law.cornell.edu/treaties/berne/overview.html) "Patrick Navin" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message news:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Jer wrote: > > > > > Then explain how it is that having a copy of a copyrighted work without > > permission from the copyright holder is not a breach of international > > copyright law. > > > > The concept of 'International Law' is something you might want to read > up on. There is no codified international legislation, merely a vast > collections of treaties, agreements and some international > organisations' articles of incorporation. > > The application of law from one state to another is one of the most > complex and frustrating areas of law. Agreements in certain territories > have no value in others becasue prevailing law may prohibit or restrict > the way in which certain agreements or contracts are enforced or allowed. > > Copyright, with it's own additional complexities, when een in an > international context, is supremely shady and difficult to apply. > Suffice to say that, what one distributor's copyrigth agreement permits > in one state, anothers' forbids in yet another. > > One clear fact is that copyright infringement cannot be dealt, under UK > law, as Theft under TFA 1986. The problem with copyright is that it > applies, invariably, to intellectual property for which it is difficult > to approve both actual appropriation and intention to deprive on a > permanent basis. > > There is no 'international copyright law' per se. The codification and > enforcement of copyright agreements caires wildly from state to state > and incoporates both legal and political implications (Chinese state's > reluctance to prosecute pirates of Microsoft/Sony etc). You must look at > your local copyright legislation, and the terms and conditions of the > individiual copyright agreement, to determine whether the copying of an > item is a substantive breach of both the agreement and the law. Bear in > mind that states almost invariably do not recognise other states as > international legal personalities by right of existence. Rather they > tend to recognise them only inasmuch as a particular treaty or agreement > identifies them. Unless a treaty or agreement between your own nation > and the nation from which the copyright agreement derives covers the > said intellectual copyright, enforcement or pursuance are unlikely. > > For a very good primer in 'International Law' and the concept of legal > personality of states I recommend Michael Akehurst's 'An Introduction to > International Law'. > > > > -- > Patrick > > I only use a Mac to annoy you - I bet you're annoyed now > GGFYT - the only thing you ever need to hear > http://www.patrick.navin.btinternet.co.uk/B834763868/ > "When you were young, you were the King of Carrot Flowers" >
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