TinyChan

Topic: whats the difference of copyright and trademark

+Anonymous A4.6 years ago #60,771

basically one is to "copy", exactly, like photocopied.

the other one is, patterns, and design?
so derivative work, is trademark infringement, not copyright?

+Anonymous B4.6 years ago, 42 minutes later[T] [B] #619,091

A copyright means that the copyright holder has exclusive rights to copy the work, as in reproduce it.

A trademark is a mark that indicates an object is produced by an individual or a group. Trademarks are for logos, like the Apple logo. No one else can put that logo on their products because they would be impersonating Apple.

Derivative work is not an infringement of either copyright or trademark.

·Anonymous A (OP) — 4.6 years ago, 5 minutes later, 47 minutes after the original post[T] [B] #619,092

i dont... derivative work usually involve a massive part of existing work so theyre usually infringment to copyright, AND possibly trademark.

what derivative work do you mean?

Start a new topic to continue this conversation.
Or browse the latest topics.

:

You are required to fill in a captcha for your first 5 posts. Sorry, but this is required to stop people from posting while drunk. Please be responsible and don't drink and post!
If you receive this often, consider not clearing your cookies.



Please familiarise yourself with the rules and markup syntax before posting.