This overview of copyright is for students and staff of University College Cork.
It is not a complete guide and should not be taken as legal advice.
Copyright is a legal property right protecting people or organisations that create original works of various types. It is copyright law that allows creators to own, control and benefit from the use of their work.
The right not to have their works copied, changed, adapted or distributed in any way without their permission is an economic right.
Copyright also notably includes moral rights, which protects creators by allowing them:
The main Copyright legislation referred to in this guide is the Copyright and Related Rights Act, 2000.
Other 'intellectual property' rights include:
Copyright legislation does not give a single definition of what constitutes a 'work', but protects original expressions of ideas that are fixed in a tangible form. The following will always be copyrighted:
Remember: Ideas or facts themselves cannot be protected by copyright! They must be "fixed" in some tangible form for copyright to apply.
There are many ways of "fixing", including:
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