A Report On Plaigarism
A Report On Plaigarism
A Report On Plaigarism
Intellectual property is a broad categorical description for the set of intangible assets owned and
The concept of intellectual property relates to the fact that certain products of human intellect
should be afforded the same protective rights that apply to physical property, which are
forms of property.
wide body of federal and state laws protects creative property such as writing, music, drawings,
paintings, photography, and films. Collectively, this body of law is called “intellectual property”
law, which includes copyright, trademark, and patent laws, each applicable in various situations
and each with its own set of technical rules. When obtaining permission to use creative works,
you’re concerned primarily with copyright law. However, trademarks, trade secrets, and
publicity and privacy rights sometimes come into play when permission to use certain types of
works is sought.
writing, architecture, movies, software, photos, dance, and music. A work must meet
protection also varies depending on when the work was created or first published.
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Trademark. Brand names such as Nike and Apple, as well as logos, slogans, and other
devices that identify and distinguish products and services, are protected under federal
and state trademark laws. Unlike copyrighted works, trademarks receive different degrees
trademark, the type of service and product it identifies, and the geographic area in which
the image and name of a person. These laws protect against the unauthorized use of a
person’s name or image for commercial purposes—for example, the use of your picture
on a box of cereal. The extent of this protection varies from state to state.
Trade Secrets. State and federal trade secret laws protect sensitive business
information. An example of a trade secret would be a confidential marketing plan for the
introduction of a new software product or the secret recipe for a brand of salsa. The
extent of trade secret protection depends on whether the information gives the business
Right of Privacy. Although not part of intellectual property laws, state privacy laws
preserve the right of all people to be left alone. Invasion of privacy occurs when someone
publishes or publicly exploits information about another person’s private affairs. Invasion
of privacy laws prevent you from intruding on, exposing private facts about, or falsely
portraying someone. The extent of this protection may vary if the subject is a public
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AN EXPLANATION OF THE CONCEPT COPYRIGHT
The definition of copyright is in the word itself: It is the right to copy. It describes the
legal rights of the owner of intellectual property. A person who owns the copyright to
work, such as song lyrics or an original drawing, is the only person who can copy that
work or grant permission to someone else to copy it. In addition to being able to assign
their copyright, license it, or use it for funding, copyright holders may also collect
royalties when others use their copyrighted work. Copyright differs from
copyrightable work that is an original literary, dramatic, musical, or artistic work. There
individual creates an original piece of art, for example, they have automatic copyright on
PLAGIARISM
Plagiarism has been defined by the Encyclopedia Britannica as “the act of taking the
writings of another person and passing them off as ones own.” 2 It is an act of forgery,
piracy, and fraud and is stated to be a serious crime of academia. 3 It is also a violation of
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Crediting the original author in an in-text citation and in your reference list
BIBLIOGRAPGHY/ REFERENCING
information that has come from other sources. Two reference styles are:
and was initially used for studies in psychology and social sciences. However,
many researchers also do use this study for other disciplines. At present, it is at its
7th edition form. This type of referencing style often uses an author-date system
of parenthetical referencing.
Example; (Field, 2005, p. 14). For sources such as websites and e-books that have
no page numbers, use a paragraph number, for example: (Field, 2005, para. 1).
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MLA Referencing style
MLA referencing style was created by the Modern Language Association, as goes
with the name. At present, it is at its 8th edition. Researchers mainly employ this
style for language and literature studies. It tends to adopt the parenthetical format
Example; Lark knows how to handle life on the river: “I try to count the seconds
before I hear the thunder, so I know how far the storm is, but I’m too rattled”
(Wingate 12).
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References
T. Thompson 2022. “Referencing Styles”. Retrieved on July 29, 2022 from Thebalancesmb.
https://www.similarweb.com/website/thebalancesmb.com.
K. Will. 2021. "Intellectual Property". Retrieved on July 20, 2022 from Investopedia.
https://www.investopedia.com/terms/i/intellectualproperty.asp.
Sims, Rich. 2022. "Overview of Intellectual Property Laws". Retrieved on July 20, 2022 from
Stanford Copyright And Fair Use Center.
https://fairuse.stanford.edu/overview/introduction/intellectual-property-laws/.