| Diritto ed Informatica: Diritto Internet
 
 
 
        
        
        
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                              | moral rights |   |  |  
        | Definition | The two moral rights which are most relevant are: * The right of identification, sometimes referred to in international treaty contexts as the ´right of paternity´. In effect, this gives authors the right to a credit or by-line, or to none if they choose; and it protects against mis-identification of a work. * The right of integrity: in UK law this is diluted to the ´right to object to derogatory treatment´. 
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        | Definition source | (Jw)holder 
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        | Context | More sensible courts have rejected this result, holding that framing of a lawfully acquired copy is not an adaptation of the work [...] The latter result was reached in part so as not to create a new moral right of integrity that would give an author control over how a lawfully owned copy of a work was displayed. Although such moral rights are recognised in some parts of the world, they are not part of copyright in the United States. 
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        | Context source | (Jw)burk 
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        | Subject field | Law 
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        | Comprehensive concept | copyright 
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        | Related concept | copyright holder, property rights 
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        | it | diritti morali 
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        | Reliability code | 3 
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        | Note | Usually in the plural. 
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