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E-grāmata: Publishing Law 5th edition [Taylor & Francis e-book]

  • Formāts: 406 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 31-Mar-2016
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • ISBN-13: 9781315737744
  • Taylor & Francis e-book
  • Cena: 155,64 €*
  • * this price gives unlimited concurrent access for unlimited time
  • Standarta cena: 222,34 €
  • Ietaupiet 30%
  • Formāts: 406 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 31-Mar-2016
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • ISBN-13: 9781315737744
Publishing Law is an authoritative and engaging guide to a wide range of legal issues affecting publishing today.

Hugh Jones and Christopher Benson present readers with clear and accessible guidance to the complex legal areas specific to the ever evolving world of contemporary publishing, including copyright, moral rights, contracts and licensing, privacy, confidentiality, defamation, infringement and trademarks, with analysis of legal issues relating to sales, advertising, marketing, distribution and competition.

This new fifth edition presents updated coverage of the key principles of copyright , as well as new copyright exceptions, licensing and open access. There is also further in-depth coverage of the legal issues around the sale of digital content.

Key features of the fifth edition include:











updated coverage of EU and UK copyright, including a new chapter on copyright exceptions following the significant changes in the 2014 Regulations Comprehensive coverage of publishing contracts with authors, as well as with other providers, including translators, contributors and contracts for subsidiary rights up to date coverage of the Defamation Act 2013, and other changes to EU and UK legislation exploration of the legal issues relating to digital publishing, including eBook and other electronic agreements, data protection and online issues in relation to privacy, and copyright infringement a range of summary checklists on key issues, ranging from copyright ownership to promotion and data protection useful appendices offering an A to Z glossary of legal terms and lists of useful address and further reading.
Preface to the fifth edition xii
PART I The law, and original works
1(92)
1 Publishing and the law
3(6)
UK and international law
3(1)
EU law
4(2)
UK law
6(3)
2 Copyright I: key principles
9(37)
Original ideas
9(1)
Introduction to copyright
9(1)
Copyright and intellectual property
10(1)
From scrolls to screens: a brief history of copyright
11(1)
The EU copyright directive: core rights and exceptions
12(3)
Copyright: the way ahead
15(1)
Copyright works
15(14)
Literary works
16(5)
Artistic works
21(2)
Dramatic and musical works
23(1)
Sound recordings, films and broadcasts
24(2)
Internet transmissions and user-generated works
26(2)
Typographical arrangements
28(1)
Ownership of copyright
29(6)
Qualification for copyright protection
35(2)
Authors and first publication
35(2)
Duration of copyright
37(9)
EU harmonisation, UK extensions and revivals
38(3)
Duration in individual works
41(5)
3 Copyright II: exceptions, licensing and Open Access
46(30)
Introduction
46(1)
The EU Copyright Directive 2001
46(1)
UK copyright exceptions after 2014
47(23)
Copying Orphan Works
68(2)
Copyright licensing and collective management
70(2)
Creative Commons licensing and Open Access
72(4)
4 Other rights of authors and publishers
76(17)
Moral rights
76(1)
The right of paternity
77(3)
The right of integrity
80(3)
Derogatory treatment
80(3)
False attribution
83(1)
The right to privacy of certain photographs or films
84(1)
Remedies for infringement of moral rights
85(1)
Database right
85(3)
Publication right
88(1)
Human rights
89(1)
Public lending right
89(1)
Artist's resale right (droit de suite)
90(3)
PART II Commissioning: publishing contracts
93(88)
5 Author contracts
95(41)
How a contract is made
95(5)
Particular contracts and legal capacity
100(4)
Author--publisher agreements
104(1)
The standard author--publisher agreement
105(31)
Rights granted
107(6)
Warranties and indemnities
113(10)
Subsidiary rights
123(13)
6 Other contracts
136(45)
Academic/professional/STM authors
136(5)
General editors
141(2)
Contributors (text and illustrations)
143(4)
Translators
147(2)
Subsidiary rights contracts
149(23)
Online access licences
172(2)
E-book agreements
174(1)
Aggregator agreements
175(2)
Other electronic agreements
177(1)
Agreements between authors and agents
178(3)
PART III Delivery, editing and obligations on publication
181(14)
7 Delivery, editing and obligations on publication
183(12)
Delivery: acceptance or rejection
183(3)
Editing and alterations
186(4)
Permissions
190(2)
Production and proofs
192(1)
Obligations on publication
192(3)
Printers and publishers details
192(1)
Legal deposit
193(2)
PART IV Publish and be damned
195(112)
8 Defamation and other risks
197(42)
Defamation
197(2)
Damages
198(1)
What is defamation?
199(1)
Libel and slander
200(1)
Serious harm
200(1)
Defamatory meaning
201(2)
Social context
203(1)
Context of the statement
204(1)
Hidden meanings and innuendoes
205(1)
The repetition rule
205(1)
Levels of meaning
206(1)
Identification
206(2)
Publication
208(2)
Defences
210(11)
Costs
221(1)
Linking
222(2)
Summary checklist: defamation
223(1)
Malicious falsehood
224(1)
Negligent mis-statement
225(2)
Obscenity
227(5)
Blasphemy
232(1)
Malicious communications
233(1)
Incitement of hatred on the grounds of race, religion or sexual orientation
233(2)
Contempt of court
235(4)
Summary checklist: other risks
238(1)
9 Confidentiality and privacy
239(21)
Introduction
239(1)
Confidential information
239(7)
Private information
246(4)
Remedies for breach of confidence and privacy
250(3)
Data protection
253(1)
Online issues
254(1)
The right to be forgotten
254(1)
Official secrets
255(5)
Summary checklist: confidentiality and privacy
259(1)
10 Copyright infringement
260(35)
Primary infringement
260(8)
The Digital Economy Act
268(1)
Secondary infringement
269(2)
Permitted acts and other defences
271(2)
Summary checklist: likeliest possible defences
271(2)
Civil and criminal remedies in the UK
273(10)
Piracy
283(1)
International copyright protection
284(11)
11 Trade marks and passing off
295(12)
Trade marks
295(7)
Passing off
302(2)
Domain name disputes
304(3)
PART V Sales and supply
307(73)
12 Sale of goods, digital content and consumer protection
309(25)
Sale of goods and digital content
309(15)
Summary checklist: legal ownership in sales
315(2)
Summary checklist: descriptions and misrepresentation
317(3)
Summary checklist: satisfactory quality
320(1)
Summary checklist: fitness for purpose
321(3)
Further consumer protection
324(5)
Summary checklist: consumer protection
329(1)
Distance selling
329(3)
Other information requirements on online traders dealing with EU consumers
332(2)
13 Advertising and marketing
334(27)
Introduction
334(1)
Unfair commercial practices
335(4)
Unfair contract terms
339(1)
Business protection from misleading advertising
340(1)
Comparative advertising
340(6)
Summary checklist: advertising and marketing
345(1)
Unsolicited goods and services
346(1)
Data protection
347(14)
Summary checklist: promotion and data protection
360(1)
14 Distribution and export
361(19)
Introduction
361(1)
Trade and competition
361(1)
Restraint of trade
362(1)
EU and UK competition rules
363(11)
Article 34 Free movement of goods
374(2)
Exhaustion of rights
376(4)
Summary checklist: competition
379(1)
Appendix A A to Z glossary of legal terms and abbreviations 380(4)
Appendix B Useful addresses and websites 384(2)
Appendix C Further reading and sources 386(1)
Index 387
Hugh Jones recently retired as Copyright Counsel to The Publishers Association. A qualified solicitor, he worked in publishing for fifteen years, for law publishers Sweet and Maxwell and reference publishers Macmillan Press, before practising for eight years as a publishing and copyright lawyer at City law firm Taylor Joynson Garrett (now Taylor Wessing). He writes and lectures regularly, and was for many years Treasurer of the British Copyright Council.

Christopher Benson is a solicitor at City law firm Taylor Wessing. He has been practising for over 20 years as an intellectual property lawyer. He has considerable experience in the fields of publishing and copyright and also advises on all aspects of intellectual property law, both contentious and non-contentious, including copyright protection, trade mark protection and passing off, brand management, licensing, merchandising, sponsorship, franchising and advertising. He is a regular writer and lecturer on intellectual property matters.