What constitutes copyright infringement

Mondo Social Updated on 2024-01-19

In today's digital age, copyright issues are gaining more and more attention. So, what constitutes copyright infringement?

First of all, without the permission of the copyright owner, using other people's works for commercial purposes, such as posting advertisements on **, sharing other people's works on social ** and obtaining profits, etc., is an act of copyright infringement. In addition, using other people's works for their own commercial purposes without permission, such as selling pirated books on **, stealing others' ** products, etc., are also copyright infringements.

Secondly, without the permission of the copyright owner, reproduction, distribution, performance, display, and production of derivative works are also copyright infringements. For example, without permission, making other people's **, movies, TV series and other works into audio or ** files, and disseminating them on the Internet, or making other people's works into derivative products without permission, such as adapting other people's ** into movies, etc., are all copyright infringements.

In addition, it is also an act of copyright infringement to use another person's work without attribution or without permission in the creative process. For example, citing someone else's point of view in scholarship without attributing the source, or using someone else's ** or other material without permission may constitute copyright infringement.

To sum up, copyright infringement can take many forms, including unauthorized use of other people's works, unauthorized use of other people's works for commercial purposes, unauthorized reproduction, distribution, performance, display, production of derivative works, etc. Therefore, we should respect the copyrights of others and use their works legally to promote the protection and healthy development of intellectual property rights.

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