Sentences with phrase «ideas in the public domain»

And the movement that put that demonstration together, and the demo itself, are responsible for keeping these ideas in the public domain and part of the national conversation.
The Court reaffirmed that the role of copyright provides «a balance between promoting the public interest in the encouragement and dissemination of works of the arts and intellect and obtaining a just reward for the creator» and that copyright does not provide a monopoly over facts or ideas in the public domain, «which all are free to draw upon for their own works».

Not exact matches

The idea appears to have first been popularized by Oral Roberts, but it has now become a theological concept in the public domain, with most broadcasters using it or variations of it.
After Tim Burton's «Alice In Wonderland» made more than a billion at the worldwide box - office in 2010, all the movie studios — as they are wont to do for lack of a better idea — decided «hey, a billion dollars is cool, all these fairy tales are in public domain, so we need one of those stat!&raquIn Wonderland» made more than a billion at the worldwide box - office in 2010, all the movie studios — as they are wont to do for lack of a better idea — decided «hey, a billion dollars is cool, all these fairy tales are in public domain, so we need one of those stat!&raquin 2010, all the movie studios — as they are wont to do for lack of a better idea — decided «hey, a billion dollars is cool, all these fairy tales are in public domain, so we need one of those stat!&raquin public domain, so we need one of those stat!»
All include lesson plans, conceptual practice, idea templates for writing poetry, and some sample public domain poetry to assist in teaching.
Extending the term of copyright on public domain works is a terrible idea, as we learned with the Sonny Bono Copyright Act in 1998: the main effects of taking material out of the public domain and putting it back in copyright was to enrich large publishing businesses at the expense of scholarship, archiving, librarianship, education and access, while dooming enormous chunks of our collective culture to be «orphan works,» with no discoverable owner, likely to have every known copy disappear or disintegrate before they re-entered the public domain and could be reissued.
The Overton window is an approach to identify which ideas define the domain of acceptability within a democracy's possible governmental policies and is used by proponents of policies outside the window to educate the public in order to shift or expand the window.
Third, I have been campaigning at Convocation for over four years that we set up a task force to look at ways to achieve the goals that are falsely claimed as achievable only through ABS; for example, how to identify, find, create (especially create), borrow, lease, adapt or steal (if in the public domain) technology and other innovative advances and ideas for the benefit of the profession and the public.
In short, it's a good idea to read the disclaimers on the site before assuming material posted there is public domain.
61 It follows from all of the above that activities such as those involved in the main proceedings, relating to data from documents which are in the public domain under national legislation, may be classified as «journalistic activities» if their object is the disclosure to the public of information, opinions or ideas, irrespective of the medium which is used to transmit them.
62 The answer to the second question should therefore be that Article 9 of the directive is to be interpreted as meaning that the activities referred to at points (a) to (d) of the first question, relating to data from documents which are in the public domain under national legislation, must be considered as activities involving the processing of personal data carried out «solely for journalistic purposes», within the meaning of that provision, if the sole object of those activities is the disclosure to the public of information, opinions or ideas.
Former Tony Abbott policy adviser Terry Barnes told Medical Observer that he supported the idea of the FOI application in the interests of public debate and getting more data into the public domain.
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