Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Navy Seal copypasta, also sometimes known as Gorilla Warfare due to a misspelling of "guerrilla warfare" in its contents, is an aggressive but humorous attack paragraph supposedly written by an extremely well-trained member of the United States Navy SEALs (hence its name) to an unidentified "kiddo", ostensibly whoever the copypasta is directed to.
United States copyright law protects original expressions but not facts, methods, discoveries, or other ideas being expressed, a doctrine known as the idea–expression distinction. Despite making this distinction, verbatim copying is not always required for copyright infringement, as paraphrasing is also prohibited in certain circumstances. [6]
"You Wouldn't Steal a Car" is the first sentence and commonly used name of a public service announcement that debuted on July 12, 2004 in cinemas, [1] and July 27 on home media, which was part of the anti-copyright infringement campaign "Piracy. It's a crime.
Jeremy Fisher, 36, a stop motion director and animator, said many of the fellow artists he follows on Instagram have reshared the viral copypasta statement because of AI-related copyright concerns.
A film stub has a 2-line lead and some cast information. Someone copy-pastes the synopsis from IMDB. After that, one or more editors create sections for production notes and reception, but the synopsis remains untouched.
Definition The word creepypasta first appeared on 4chan , an online imageboard , around 2007. It is a variant of copypasta (from " copy and paste "), another 4chan term which refers to blocks of text which become viral by being copied widely around the internet .
Second-century bronze jug held by the British Museum, with false copyright claim, while on loan to Tullie House Museum. A copyfraud is a false copyright claim by an individual or institution with respect to content that is in the public domain. Such claims are unlawful, at least under US and Australian copyright law, because material that is ...
The Norwegian copyright act does not address public domain directly. The Norwegian copyright law defines two basic rights for authors: economic rights and moral rights. [..] For material that is outside the scope of copyright, the phrase «i det fri» («in the free») is used. This corresponds roughly to the term «public domain» in English.