Does copyright law apply to the Internet?
Yes,
it does, although the words "electronic" or "Internet" don't appear
in the Copyright Act. Because the Internet is a new medium,
people may assume that different rules apply there, but that is
not the case. Copyright law seeks to protect the fixed expression
of an idea, regardless of the medium it is published on. For example,
a story that is published on paper, in a book, has a fixed arrangement
of words, character and plot. But if that same story was published
as an electronic book, on the Internet, it would still have the
same words, character and plot. And that is what copyright law tries
to protect.
Suppose
you bought the most recent best selling paperback book from Tom
Clancy, and re-entered the text into your computer. If copyright
laws didn't apply on the Internet, nothing would stop you from uploading
that text to the World Wide Web and selling Mr. Clancy's book directly.
But since copyright subsists in his words, you are not allowed to
reproduce them, in a book, on a computer disk, or on the Internet.
WARNING:
The contents of these FAQs are intended as general legal information
only.
If
you have a personal problem, please consult a lawyer.
December
1998 |