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20 Cards in this Set

  • Front
  • Back
aspects of invasion of privacy
intrusion, private matters violating ordinary decency, false light, appropriation
there are certain places that people have the right to be left alone (home, hospital room, restroom)
intrusion
a court case involving intrusion. time magazine took a picture of dorothy who had a rare disease. her family sued on invasion of her privacy
dorothy barber vs. time magazine
publications of the names of rape victimes, if the victim dies then the printin of the name is not an invasion of privacy. barber case applies here too.
private matters violating ordinary decency
make someone sieem to be something they aren't
false light
court case involving false light. criminals took Hill family hostage. someone made a book out of it which turned into a play and a movie. Time did a piece on "what has happened to them now" big difference in what actually happened and what the movie portrayed
time magazine vs. Hill Family
using some element of personality for commercial use without their consent. when you are out in the public you don't have any right to have someone pay for your picture.
appropriation
court cases related to appropriation
robinson vs. the boxing co. and pavesich vs. new england life.
privacy does not exist in the constitution. it is
implied
argued that privacy in own home is constitutional. came to her house and arrested her for her pornography that she watched in the company of her own home.
Mapp v. Ohio
if a casual passwer bye sees you doing something and takes a picture of it, you have
no recourse. ex drunk girl at foot ball game.
used for things like plays, books, and music
copyright
copyright lasts
life of author plus 70 years after, then it is public domain
time starts when work is in finished form - once you record/write it down
copyright
mail your self something that you'be written, and techincally it is copyrighted and you could argue it
poor man's copyright
things that are not eligible for copyright.
titles, short slogans, works that come from public documents, speech, things in public domain, ideas
the exclusive right granted by the government to an inventor to manufacture, use, or sell an invention for a certain number of years
patents
any name, symobl, figure, letter, word, or mark adopted and used by a manufacturer or merchant in order to designate his or her goods and to distinguish them from those manufactured or sold by others. ex. mickey mouse
trademarks
according to broadcasting law section 315 of communications act who owns the air ways?
we the people. if you want to own a broadcast station you have to write to the FCC
your station must operate for the publics convenience or necessity - the doctrine that says whether you can get or keep a license.
PICON - public interest convenience or necessity