copyfraud
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]A compound of copy + fraud. Coined in an August 2005 article, "Copyfraud" [1] by Jason Mazzone, an Associate Professor of Law at Brooklyn Law School.
Noun
[edit]copyfraud (uncountable)
- (law) False claims of copyright, such as a claim of copyright ownership of public domain material.
- 2006, Mark Jordan, Putting Content Online: A Practical Guide for Libraries[2], →ISBN, pages 47, 48:
- Copyfraud is falsely claiming copyright ownership of works in the public domain. […] Mazzone's article describes copyfraud within the context of US copyright law, but he points out that: ‘As a result of the Berne Convention, there are some basic similarities throughout much of the world.[’]
- 2008, Eva Hemmungs Wirtén, “‘I am Two Mowglis’: Kipling, Disney, and a Lesson in How to Use (and Abuse) the Public Domain”, in Terms of Use: Negotiating the Jungle of the Intellectual Commons[4], →ISBN, page 105:
- Made possible because people trust in the veracity of something that at times is nothing more than a chimera, copyfraud is a particularly acute problem when exacerbated by public institutions like museums.
Usage notes
[edit]- False claims do not need to be fraudulent or made in bad faith to qualify as copyfraud.