Katana VentraIP

Copyright infringement

Copyright infringement (at times referred to as piracy) is the use of works protected by copyright without permission for a usage where such permission is required, thereby infringing certain exclusive rights granted to the copyright holder, such as the right to reproduce, distribute, display or perform the protected work, or to make derivative works. The copyright holder is typically the work's creator, or a publisher or other business to whom copyright has been assigned. Copyright holders routinely invoke legal and technological measures to prevent and penalize copyright infringement.

For information on handling copyright concerns in Wikipedia, see Wikipedia:Copyright violations.

Copyright infringement disputes are usually resolved through direct negotiation, a notice and take down process, or litigation in civil court. Egregious or large-scale commercial infringement, especially when it involves counterfeiting, is sometimes prosecuted via the criminal justice system. Shifting public expectations, advances in digital technology and the increasing reach of the Internet have led to such widespread, anonymous infringement that copyright-dependent industries now focus less on pursuing individuals who seek and share copyright-protected content online, and more on expanding copyright law to recognize and penalize, as indirect infringers, the service providers and software distributors who are said to facilitate and encourage individual acts of infringement by others.


Estimates of the actual economic impact of copyright infringement vary widely and depend on other factors. Nevertheless, copyright holders, industry representatives, and legislators have long characterized copyright infringement as piracy or theft – language which some U.S. courts now regard as pejorative or otherwise contentious.[1][2][3]

Pricing – unwillingness or inability to pay the price requested by the legitimate sellers

Testing and evaluation – try before paying for what may be bad value

Unavailability – no legitimate sellers providing the product in the language or country of the end-user: not yet launched there, already withdrawn from sales, never to be sold there, geographical restrictions on and international shipping

online distribution

Usefulness – the legitimate product comes with various means (, region lock, DVD region code, Blu-ray region code) of restricting legitimate use (backups, usage on devices of different vendors, offline usage) or comes with non-skippable advertisements and anti-piracy disclaimers, which are removed in the unauthorized product, making it more desirable for the end-user

DRM

Shopping experience – no legitimate sellers providing the product with the required quality through and through a shopping system with the required level of user-friendliness

online distribution

Anonymity – works does not require identification whereas downloads directly from the website of the copyright owner often require a valid email address and/or other credentials

downloading

Freedom of information – opposition to copyright law in general

"Increase public education and raise awareness about software piracy and IP rights in cooperation with industry and law enforcement."

"Modernize protections for software and other copyrighted materials to keep pace with new innovations such as cloud computing and the proliferation of networked mobile devices."

"Strengthen enforcement of IP laws with dedicated resources, including specialized enforcement units, training for law enforcement and judiciary officials, improved cross-border cooperation among law enforcement agencies, and fulfillment of obligations under the World Trade Organization's Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS)."

"Lead by example by using only fully licensed software, implementing software asset management (SAM) programs, and promoting the use of legal software in state-owned enterprises, and among all contractors and suppliers."

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(FSF)

Free Software Foundation

(OSI)

Open Source Initiative

(EFF)

Electronic Frontier Foundation

(CC)

Creative Commons

Demand Progress

Fight for the Future

Pirate Party

by major funders of scientific research

Plan S

(BSA)

Business Software Alliance

(CAAST)

Canadian Alliance Against Software Theft

(ESA)

Entertainment Software Association

(FACT)

Federation Against Copyright Theft

(FAST)

Federation Against Software Theft

(IIPA)

International Intellectual Property Alliance

Copyright Alliance

Hamerman, Sarah (11 September 2015). . The Media.

"PIRATE LIBRARIES and the fight for open information"

Deka, Maitrayee (2017). (PDF). Journal of Cultural Economy. 10 (5): 450–461. doi:10.1080/17530350.2017.1352009. S2CID 56318191.

"Calculation in the pirate bazaars"

Horten, Monica (2012). The Copyright Enforcement Enigma – Internet Politics and the Telecoms Package. . ISBN 978-0-230-32171-7.

Palgrave Macmillan

Johns, Adrian (2009). Piracy. The Intellectual Property Wars from Gutenberg to Gates. . ISBN 978-0-226-40118-8.

The University of Chicago Press

Karaganis, Joe, ed. (2011). . Social Science Research Council. ISBN 978-0-9841257-4-6.

Media Piracy in Emerging Economies

Rosen, Ronald (2008). Music and Copyright. Oxford Oxfordshire: Oxford University Press.  978-0-19-533836-2.

ISBN

Abbott; Madigan; Mossoff; Osenga; Rosen. (PDF). Regulatory Transparency Project. Retrieved 15 May 2021.

"Holding States Accountable for Copyright Piracy"

Media related to Copyright infringement at Wikimedia Commons