Copyright is a comprehensive right, including both personal rights and property rights.
Identity rights refer to the civil rights of citizens arising from their specific identities. It is also an important part of personal rights. The right to identity is not enjoyed by everyone. Identity rights mainly include personal rights in intellectual property rights such as copyrights, invention rights, patent rights, trademark rights, etc., as well as guardianship rights, family rights, etc. Guardianship rights in identity rights are rights that immediately cease when the owner dies. Other identity rights will never be extinguished or will not be extinguished for a period of time.
Intellectual property rights are the rights of the owner as a copyright owner, inventor, patent owner, etc. The retention time of this identity right is consistent with the country’s protection period for intellectual property rights. For example, my country's Copyright Law stipulates that the state's copyright protection period is 50 years after the author's death. my country's Patent Law stipulates that the protection period of an invention patent is 20 years. This means that the copyright owner will still enjoy the status of the copyright owner within 50 years after his death; and the owner of the invention patent will continue to enjoy this status within 20 years (from the date of legal recognition), regardless of whether the owner dies or not. One identity.
Copyright includes the following personal rights and property rights:
(1) The right of publication, that is, the right to decide whether the work will be made public;
(2) The right of signature, that is, the right to indicate The identity of the author, the right to sign the work;
(3) The right to modify, that is, the right to modify or authorize others to modify the work;
(4) The right to protect the integrity of the work, that is, to protect the work The right to protect the work from distortion or tampering;
(5) The right to reproduce, that is, the right to make one or more copies of the work by printing, copying, rubbing, recording, videotaping, ripping, or photocopying, etc. ;
(6) Distribution rights, that is, the right to provide originals or copies of works to the public by selling or donating them;
(7) Rental rights, that is, allowing others to temporarily license others for a fee The right to use cinematographic works and works created by methods similar to filmmaking, and computer software, except that computer software is not the main subject of the lease;
(8) Exhibition rights, that is, the public display of fine arts and photographic works The right to the original or copy of the work;
(9) Performance right, that is, the right to perform the work publicly and to publicly broadcast the work by various means;
(10) Screening Right, that is, the right to publicly reproduce art, photography, film, and works created by methods similar to filmmaking through projectors, slide projectors and other technical equipment;
(11) Broadcasting rights, that is, wirelessly The right to broadcast or disseminate works, to disseminate broadcast works to the public by wired transmission or rebroadcasting, and to disseminate broadcast works to the public through loudspeakers or other similar instruments that transmit symbols, sounds, and images;
(12) Information network dissemination right, that is, the right to provide works to the public through wired or wireless means so that the public can obtain the works at a time and place of their personal choosing;
(13) Filming Right, that is, the right to fix the work on a carrier by making a movie or using a method similar to making a movie;
(14) Adaptation right, that is, the right to change the work and create a new original work ;
(15) Translation rights, that is, the right to convert works from one language into another language;
(16) Compilation rights, that is, works or works The right to assemble the fragments into a new work through selection or arrangement;
(17) Other rights that should be enjoyed by the copyright owner.
The copyright owner may permit others to exercise the rights specified in items (5) to (17) of the preceding paragraph, and receive remuneration in accordance with the agreement or relevant provisions of the Copyright Law.
The copyright owner may transfer all or part of the rights specified in items (5) to (17) of paragraph 1 of this article, and receive remuneration in accordance with the agreement or relevant provisions of the Copyright Law.