Sentences with phrase «literary properties»

Obviously, the method of delivering content to consumers has drastically changed in the past 25 years, and publishing professionals use digital tools to find and negotiate for literary property.
Provided various substantial and transactional features regarding intellectual possessions act with extraordinary highlighting on music, art and other literary property issues include copyright register, licensing, unfair contesting and other trademark and negotiation related issue.
I have tried, for example, to explain some of the ramifications of Amazon's contract with self - publishing authors for Kindle (which is a bit of a rights grab but one that may be tolerable,) but what often becomes clear is that people really don't understand what literary property rights are and what contract terms mean half the time.
Cronenberg recalls his own Crash in these ideas — and not just in his desire to adapt literary properties considered unadaptable.
Extensive litigation and transactional experience in various aspects of intellectual property law with special emphasis on artistic, musical and literary property issues with licensing litigation and copyright registration of false advertising, defamation claims and unfair competition, litigation and negotiation of issues of trademark licensing in the context of negotiation, bankruptcy proceedings and formulation of agreements for entertainers.
The Chaldean Syrian Church graciously entrusted the rights of the literary property of the Bishop with the Trust.
The moment has been richly prepared for by at least two generations of biblical scholars who have been attentive to the literary properties of everything from the parables to the Davidic court history.
It is 1978 now, and I would like to announce that Running, as a literary property, is as tiresome as Ruined Young Girls, and that I don't want to hear it mentioned again.
Agents can join as members - at - large if they've sold at least 10 literary properties.
Reputable literary agents derive their income from commissions on the sale of literary properties, and not from upfront fees.
In 1997, DWAI created a subsidiary called 17th Street Productions to pursue cross-media development of its literary properties; in 2000, Alloy Entertainment bought both companies.
The LWI defines plagiarism as «taking the literary property of another, passing it off as one's own without appropriate attribution, and reaping from its use any benefit from an academic institution.»
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