Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography and portraiture - Will ppt involve copyright issues?

Will ppt involve copyright issues?

Yes, PPT involves intellectual property issues, especially fonts and pictures. Many fonts and pictures downloaded from the Internet cannot be used for business.

I. Constitutive conditions of copyright

On the creative conditions of works. According to the general theory, a work needs to meet three conditions:

First, it has some spiritual content, that is, the work should have some ideological or aesthetic spiritual content;

Second, the above spiritual content needs to be expressed through certain forms of expression. The idea that stays in the brain cannot be called a work, but must be expressed concretely. In addition, it needs to be produced outside, but it doesn't matter whether it is preserved like recording or writing or improvised and fleeting like singing or speaking;

Third, we should be original, that is, works completed through personal intellectual labor. Obviously plagiarism doesn't count. Obviously, the works created by modern people cannot be castles in the air. They often use some works that have been created by predecessors or works that have been in the public domain, and can be used freely as materials. The work created in this way only enjoys the copyright of its original part, which can be understood as the existence of its original fragments and the whole work.

Legal basis:

Copyright law of the people's Republic of China

Article 24. Under the following circumstances, a work may be used without permission and without payment to the copyright owner, but the name of the author and the title of the work shall be indicated, and the normal use of the work shall not be affected, and the legitimate rights and interests of the copyright owner shall not be unreasonably harmed:

(a) for personal study, research or appreciation of the use of other people's published works;

(2) appropriately quoting published works of others in works for the purpose of introducing and commenting on works or explaining problems;

(3) Inevitably reprinting or quoting published works in newspapers, periodicals, radio stations, television stations and other media in order to report news;

(4) Newspapers, periodicals, radio stations, television stations and other media publish or broadcast current affairs articles related to political, economic and religious issues that have been published by other newspapers, periodicals, radio stations, television stations and other media, unless the copyright owner declares that they are not allowed to publish or broadcast;

(5) Newspapers, periodicals, radio stations, television stations and other media publish or broadcast speeches delivered at public meetings, unless the author declares that they are not allowed to publish or broadcast;

(6) Translating, adapting, editing, playing or reproducing a few published works for classroom teaching or scientific research in schools, but not for publication and distribution;

(seven) the use of published works by state organs within the reasonable scope of performing official duties;

(eight) libraries, archives, memorial halls, museums, art galleries, cultural centers, etc., in order to display or save the version, copy the works collected by the library;

(9) Performing published works for free, without charging fees to the public, without paying remuneration to the performers, and not for profit;

(10) Copying, painting, photographing and video recording works of art set up or displayed in public places;

(eleven) to translate the works published by China citizens, legal persons or unincorporated organizations in the common language of the country into works written in minority languages and publish them in China;

(12) Provide published works to people with dyslexia in a barrier-free way that they can perceive;

(thirteen) other circumstances stipulated by laws and administrative regulations.

The provisions of the preceding paragraph shall apply to restrictions on copyright-related rights.