Jacob Epstein copies Martin Amis' book, The Rachel Papers, in its entirety, and sells it to Penguin Books without Amis' permission. Penguin publishes the book under Epstein's name. This is a. copyright infringement. b. protected expression. c. fair use. d. licensing. QUESTION 25 Jerry Baldwin creates a new apparatus to brew coffee with. Jerry brands this new apparatus as "KaCao." He also drafts the operating manual for its use. Jerry can obtain trademark protection for a. the apparatus. b. the operating manual. c. the name. d. the "newness" of the apparatus.
Added by Chelsea W.
Close
Step 1
Jacob Epstein copies Martin Amis' book "The Rachel Papers" in its entirety: This is an act of reproducing the entire work without the permission of the copyright holder, which is Martin Amis in this case. Copying someone else's work without authorization is a Show more…
Show all steps
Your feedback will help us improve your experience
Kevra Barney and 82 other Principles of Accounting educators are ready to help you.
Ask a new question
Labs
Want to see this concept in action?
Explore this concept interactively to see how it behaves as you change inputs.
Recommended Videos
Axel steals a business law textbook from beth. curt, who does not know that the book is stolen, buys it from axel. curt has committed
Haricharan G.
Walt hires Jay to act as his agent in the purchase of Florida land. Walt tells Jay to reveal only that he is buying the land on behalf of a third party, without telling the land's seller who that third party is. Walt is an undisclosed principal.
Is a university with a clear, written policy which expressly forbids any prohibited use of copyrighted material vicariously liable when a professor (who knows the policy) violates copyright law in publishing an article? a) Yes. The policy cannot protect the university from being vicariously liable for the professor's actions. b) Maybe, if the professor took steps to prevent the university from discovering his infringement. c) No. The university is not liable for the copyright infringement of any of its staff. d) No. Since the university has a policy against this use of copyrighted material, the professor could not have been acting in the scope of his employment. e) Yes. A university is always vicariously liable for the bad acts of its employees.
Nick J.
Recommended Textbooks
Horngren’s Cost Accounting
Cost Accounting A Managerial Emphasis
Principles of Accounting Volume 1: Financial Accounting
18,000,000+
Students on Numerade
Trusted by students at 8,000+ universities
Watch the video solution with this free unlock.
EMAIL
PASSWORD