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Academic-Materials-and-Publishing-2014

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Intellectual Property Section 2 Q: I recently filmed members of the public responding to a questionnaire which I had prepared. I am going to be showing the film to my peers and students in order to show them the difference between responses received to "open" questions and those received to 'closed' questions. Can I do this? A: No. You cannot show the film until you have obtained the consent of the members of the public that you filmed. These people have rights in their spoken words which you have recorded and so made into a literary work. You will also need their consent if you want to make any copies of or to sell your film. The same rules would apply if you recorded a person reading a book which you want to sell as an audio book – that person would have performer's rights. Database rights These protect collections of work or data (e.g. results, samples or patient information) which have been systematically arranged and are accessible electronically or by other means. There is no need to register and protection lasts for 15 years from the date the database was compiled. If you substantially alter a database, the 15 year protection period will begin to run again from the date you made the changes. 10

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