Intellectual Property Rights in Software
A Practical Guide for Professionals and Business Managers
British Computer Society(Author)
British Computer Society (Publisher)
Published in February 2000
Book
Paperback/Softback
56 pages
978-1-902505-18-3 (ISBN)
Description
The legal and regulatory environment protecting the work of those in the IT industry has evolved from established precedents dealing with significantly less complicated practices. It is easy to state the basic principle of Intellectual Property Rights - applying it in practice is not. There are uncertainties in the application of the existing law and international pressure for change. However practical measures exist that honest practitioners can take to protect their intellectual property and to guard against misplaced allegations of infringement. For many members of the IT community the only professional property they own is intellectual. Whilst it is easy to say that unauthorised appropriation of this is theft, the practical implications are extremely complex.
The legal and regulatory environment protecting the work of those in the IT industry has evolved from established precedents dealing with significantly less complicated practices. It is easy to state the basic principle of Intellectual Property Rights - applying it in practice is not. There are uncertainties in the application of the existing law and international pressure for change. However practical measures exist that honest practitioners can take to protect their intellectual property and to guard against misplaced allegations of infringement. For many members of the IT community the only professional property they own is intellectual. Whilst it is easy to say that unauthorised appropriation of this is theft, the practical implications are extremely complex.
The legal and regulatory environment protecting the work of those in the IT industry has evolved from established precedents dealing with significantly less complicated practices. It is easy to state the basic principle of Intellectual Property Rights - applying it in practice is not. There are uncertainties in the application of the existing law and international pressure for change. However practical measures exist that honest practitioners can take to protect their intellectual property and to guard against misplaced allegations of infringement. For many members of the IT community the only professional property they own is intellectual. Whilst it is easy to say that unauthorised appropriation of this is theft, the practical implications are extremely complex.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Swindon
United Kingdom
Publishing group
BCS Learning & Development Limited
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 296 mm
Width: 210 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-902505-18-3 (9781902505183)
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Schweitzer Classification
Content
Legal protection of IPR; The organisation and software protection; The international dimension; The rights of the individual; Dispute resolution; Legal case studies