Copyrights and Intellectual Property Clause Samples
Copyrights and Intellectual Property. In consideration of the District’s financial support for professional development of its teaching staff, and the salary and other payments made to teachers for development of materials related to the learning process, the Parties agree that any and all curricula, tests, lesson plans, books and other learning materials and intellectual property developed by teachers during the period of their employment as well as any related monetary remuneration shall be shared between the teacher and the Hartford School District on a 50% - 50% basis.
Copyrights and Intellectual Property. 17.1 In recognition of the Corporation’s commitment to scholarship, including teaching, research, and publication activities, the Corporation agrees that Members have complete intellectual and artistic freedom in the creation of intellectual property and the unqualified right to disseminate by any means whatsoever the intellectual property which they own. The creator is free to publish or use other means to place the intellectual property in the public domain. The Corporation and the Association agree that Members have no obligation to seek patent or other legal protection for the results of their work or to modify research to enhance patentability. No creator is obliged to engage in commercial exploitation.
17.2 The Corporation shall not enter into any agreement with a third party which alters or abridges, or has the effect of altering or abridging, the intellectual property rights of a Member.
Copyrights and Intellectual Property. Copyright on all training materials and methodology remains with TWI, CSWIP, AWS and/or DTW, except where copyright exists with a third party supplier. You agree that you will not copy or resell any training material or methodology that you may be given by DTW during your training or examination.
Copyrights and Intellectual Property. The second factor in the four factor fair use test considers (1) whether the copyrighted work is expressive or creative, with a greater leeway being allowed to a claim of fair use where the work is factual or informational, and (2) whether the work is published or unpublished, with the scope for fair use involving unpublished works being considerably narrower. 17 U.S.C.A. § 107.
Copyrights and Intellectual Property. 3.1 The UNIVERSITY agrees to use its best efforts, consistent with sound and reasonable judgment, to register COPYRIGHTS.
3.2 The UNIVERSITY shall have sole title to DATABASE and all COPYRIGHTS.
3.3 Nothing in this agreement shall be construed to give LICENSEE rights in any technologies developed by the UNIVERSITY other than those explicitly specified in this agreement. Nothing in this agreement shall be construed to give the UNIVERSITY rights in technologies developed by LICENSEE other than those explicitly specified in this agreement.
3.4 LICENSEE shall have sole title to all trademarks it develops and uses in connection with LICENSEE’s business. LICENSEE shall have no ownership right or use rights to any trademark registered by the UNIVERSITY
3.5 The UNIVERSITY does not plan to pursue applications or patents for subject matter concerning the DATABASE at this time. The UNIVERSITY shall have the option, at its sole discretion and expense, to file and prosecute applications and to maintain patents on the DATABASE and future improvements made by the UNIVERSITY.
Copyrights and Intellectual Property. 4.1 Any written documents, logos, different types of flyers, practice, and promotion of any written documents, practice or method developed by the Centre in co-organizing the Event shall belong to the Centre while all methodologies, procedures, management tools, workshops, manuals, software, data files, concepts, ideas, inventions, know-how and other intellectual property that the Event Partner has developed prior or simultaneous to the Event are, and shall remain, the sole and exclusive property of the Event Partner.
Copyrights and Intellectual Property. O53.2 A secondary use of a copyrighted ma- terial can be transformative in function or purpose even without altering or actually adding to the original work. 17 U.S.C.A. § 107.
Copyrights and Intellectual Property. O53.2 The fair use doctrine is a statutory exception to copyright infringement. 17 U.S.C.A. § 107.
Copyrights and Intellectual Property. O53.2 To determine whether the secondary use of a copyrighted material is transfor- mative, for the purposes of a fair use inquiry, the question is whether the new work merely supersedes the objects of the original creation, or instead adds some- thing new, with a further purpose or dif- ferent character, altering the first with new expression, meaning, or message. 17 U.S.C.A. § 107.
Copyrights and Intellectual Property. O64 It was unlikely that museum’s second- ary use of photographer’s copyrighted pho- tograph of musician affected markets for photograph’s original expressive purpose, and thus weighed in favor of finding that museum’s use of photograph constituted fair use; although photographer argued that museum was potential market for his work because of shift toward more mod- ern, pop-culture centered exhibits, tradi- tional market for photograph would have been collectors of photographs of rock leg- ends or other persons seeking to showcase musician’s band, market might have ex- tended to museums exhibiting musicians, and museum’s use of photograph fell into different transformative market. 17 U.S.C.A. § 107.