Borderline intellectual functioning

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    Culture Of Piracy

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    engages in online piracy, and why they choose to do so. Steal This Film paints an image of a new generation of pirates. Through the interviews, they make it seem as if piracy is an issue created by a brave new generation that does not believe in intellectual property protection. Moreover, some of the interviewees argue that we pirate simply because it is in our nature to do so. They argue that online piracy is simply a result of a new generation getting back in touch with who we are as humans.…

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    A Great Dislike for Intellectuals “[I]ntellectuals constantly see their efforts trivialized in the rush to lavish compliments elsewhere,” (759). This is a statement from Grant Penrod’s article, Anti-Intellectualism: Why We Hate the Smart Kids, that creates a strong inquiry as to why the problem occurs. His article presents an in-depth exploration of the reasons. Penrod starts off the article by stating that an Arizona high school football team was praised for their championship, but that the…

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    The definition of Intellectual Property Rights is an invention created from a person or company’s idea which is then patented for the legal rights to the concept. The apex of the amalgamation of Intellectual Property Rights and the global south is during a September 1986 meeting with the GATT member states in Punta del Este, Uruguay. The Quad (United States, Europe, Canada, and Japan) wanted to push an idea during the eight round of discussions that, “to preserve as much as possible their…

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    noted also that CleverTech Inc. did not take the precautions of claiming superimposing intellectual property over their designs. Being that CleverTech’s…

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    According to the dictionary, copyright refers to the exclusive rights that protect the works of authors, artists, and composers from being reproduced, performed, or distributed by others without permission. The artist or the owner of the copyright has the right to reproduce their protected work as well as to replicate copies and sell them, exhibit their work to the public, etc. Copyright’s main focus is to protect how the author has expressed his or her concept or idea; it does not protect the…

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    Sonic Gear Sonic Gear is all regarding showcasing the whole thing Sonic the Hedgehog associated. Excluding that doesn't mean that the lot Sonic is fresh. No. There is a gloomy elevation to all the accumulating, and it is identify transformed Gear. Corporations aren’t for eternity vigilant when deceitful sonic substance, and while that ensue you acquire revolting commodities. Sonic Gear isn't terrified to entitle terrible excellence or horrifying plan when it's originate, and that's what this…

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    Heraldry is a system of identification used during the Middle Ages. It was used to identify knights on a battlefield, and to describe a person’s belief and culture. Heraldry was used by leaders so they could identify their knights. The knights in battle wore the heraldry. An established heraldic shield could not be copied by another person. As long as it was established because it was the person’s personal property, therefore, no one can use it but them. Both copyrights and heraldic shields…

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    Fair Use Law

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    Copyright law is defined as a form of protection provided by the laws of the United States to authors of “original works of authorship”. Copyright law is covered in Article 1 Section 8 of the U.S. Constitution. Article 1 of the Constitution as a whole involves freedom of speech. Fair use law is defined as a limitation and exception to the exclusive right granted by copyright law to the author of a creative work. Fair use law is covered in Section 107 of the U.S. Constitution. A copyright is…

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    Copyright law covers sections 101 through 122 of Title 17 in the United States Code. Copyright Law is defined as the legal right to use, print, film, publish, or copy anything that another author/producer has created by permission. Copyright Law is meant to protect media that someone has produced from being stolen, and to prevent others for taking credit for someone else’s work. Consequences for attempting copyright infringement include payment for the damage to profits, fees for all the…

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    Moral Rights In Australia

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    Executive Summary This issue paper identifies problems of bargaining inequality in relation to consent provisions, sections 195AW, 195AWB and 195AXJ in Copyright Act 1968 (Cth) (hereafter “the Act”). The pivotal analysis in this paper is if artists’ moral rights, especially the young visual artists under age of 30 in the Queensland Youth Artists Collective, are effectively protected against the inequality under the provisions. The paper applies the theory of liberalism to examine the…

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