Difference Between Copyright and Trademark

Copyright and Trademark are two ways to legally protect intellectual property rights. However, they are used to protect different types of intellectual property and in different media.

If you don’t know what the difference is between Copyright and Trademark, keep reading; because this time we explain it to you.

COPYRIGHT  Difference Between Copyright and Trademark

Copyright gives a person the ownership and rights to an original work of art or intellectual. It is a legal concept that gives the creator of an original work the right to allow to copy or not what he has created, the right to be credited for his work, the right to determine who can adapt his work to other forms, the right to determine who You can benefit financially from your work and other related rights.

Around 165 countries in the world support the rules of the Berne Copyright Convention. Under these rules, copyright is automatic. These rules are applicable to any work and are valid for 50 years from the day of its publication or up to 50 years after the death of the author. However, these rules may vary depending on the country.

An original work can be literary , dramatic, musical, or artistic in a general sense. Other creative works may also be included. However, the work in addition to being original must be physical; Copyright cannot be set for an idea. It must also be shown that some skills and thoughts were used or embodied in the creation of the work. It is not just a matter of drawing a line on paper and hoping that the “drawing” is copyrighted.

In spite of everything, an author cannot apply intellectual property rights to certain things such as: titles, names, short phrases and slogans; familiar symbols or designs; mere variations of typographic ornamentation, letters or colors. Since these kinds of things are covered under the trademark (Trademark).

 TRADEMARK

A brand is a recognizable sign, design, or expression that is associated with a business, individual, or company. Trademarks are used to identify a certain product, logo or company. They often identify products or services. For example: Puma’s cougar, Apple’s bitten apple, Microsoft’s window, McDonalds’ golden arches, and Playboy’s bunny. They are logos and trademarks of their respective companies.

Trademarks may also incorporate slogans, such as Nike’s “Just Do It”; Panasonic “Ideas for Life”; Nokia “Connecting People” and McDonalds “I love it.” É stash are also trademarks of their respective companies.

Trademarks can also be just a word, phrase, symbol , design, or any attached combination. Once the trademark is registered, it cannot be used by any other entity.

The main difference between copyright (Copyright) and trademark (Trademark) is that the former is mainly used for individual creative works, while the latter is generally used for company logos, symbols or slogans. However, some logos, symbols or slogans may be both copyrighted and trademarked.

Key differences between trademark (Trademark) and copyright (Copyright)

  • Copyright is generally applied in artistic or intellectual works, while the registered trademark is applied in the cases of logos, symbols, slogans of companies, people, groups.
  • A book by George RR Martin is copyrighted (Copyright), while Apple’s bitten apple has a trademark (Trademark).

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