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『宝丽金档案』宝丽金的五十年来最高销量大碟! [复制链接]

81#

我爱DTS 在 2005-7-15 18:04:55 发表的内容
原来听磁带的时候首选宝丽金和华纳!


不明白何解?
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82#

xinxin92 在 2005-7-13 23:39:39 发表的内容


哈哈,也请你弄清楚英文 (P)   &   (C) 的意思再说吧!
知道(C) 是什么意思吗?


©是Copy Right的缩写,“版权所有”的意思

小资料:
《世界版权公约》
《世界版权公约》于1952年在日内瓦缔结, 1955年生效。《世界版权公约》的日常事务由联合国教科文组织管理。到2001年,有98个成员国。
依据《世界版权公约》,取得版权保护的条件是:自出版之日起,每份出版的作品都需要经作者或其他版权所有者允许,标明符号©,并要注明作者的姓名、首版年月。现在我们在很多图书上可以看到这样的标志。


《日内瓦公约》
《保护录音制品制作者防止未经许可复制其录音制品公约》简称《日内瓦公约》或《录音制品公约》。1971年在修订《伯尔尼公约》和《世界版权公约》的同时,在日内瓦缔结了这个公约。该公约是一个“邻接权公约”。公约由世界知识产权组织负责管理。与《世界版权公约》一样,《日内瓦公约》采用的也是非自动保护原则。它的版权标记是字母P外加一个圆圈。还要注明首次发行年份、录制者或其合法继承人或其独占被许可人的姓名或名称。
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83#

帖子里的©是用MS Word打出来的,利用Word的插入“符号”里面就有符号©。
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84#

Bosa_nova 在 2005-7-17 1:01:14 发表的内容
©是Copy Right的缩写,“版权所有”的意思

小资料:
《世界版权公约》
《世界版权公约》于1952年在日内瓦缔结, 1955年生效。《世界版权公约》的日常事务由联合国教科文组织管理。到2001年,有98个成员国。
依据《世界版权公约》,取得版权保护的条件是:自出版之日起,每份出版的作品都需要经作者或其他版权所有者允许,标明符号©,并要注明作者的姓名、首版年月。现在我们在很多图书上可以看到这样的标志。


《日内瓦公约》
《保护录音制品制作者防止未经许可复制其录音制品公约》简称《日内瓦公约》或《录音制品公约》。1971年在修订《伯尔尼公约》和《世界版权公约》的同时,在日内瓦缔结了这个公约。该公约是一个“邻接权公约”。公约由世界知识产权组织负责管理。与《世界版权公约》一样,《日内瓦公约》采用的也是非自动保护原则。它的版权标记是字母P外加一个圆圈。还要注明首次发行年份、录制者或其合法继承人或其独占被许可人的姓名或名称。


先请教一下,你帖子里的©是怎么打出来的,谢谢

根据上面的解释,©就是表示印有该标记的这种形式的出版物的首次出版时间,而未包括该出版物内容以前以其他形式出版的出版物。
附图就能说明这一点:这是DECCA著名CD《西班牙》,封底上的[ P]表示该音乐内容于57、58年以其他形式出版过,而©表示的是这张出版物是1995年首次以CD形式出版的。
如果该出版物的首版就有以CD的形式出版的,那这张CD的P 和 C 的时间就是相同的。当然不排除不按规矩办事的出版商胡乱标记的。
一般欧美出版商是很讲究版权的时效性的,他们绝不会把90年出版的东西提前10年标记为80年,这样不是白白丢掉了10年的版权期。

[upload=jpg]Upload/200571716543370951.jpg[/upload]
最后编辑xinxin92
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85#

谢谢
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86#

小資料全英語看不懂啊
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87#

边嗰来翻译?
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88#

xinxin92 在 2005-7-18 8:35:26 发表的内容
谢谢

不客气~      

其实是"Phonogram rights "的缩写.

ZT:小资料

What is a copyright notice?
A piece of text which accompanies a work and expresses the rights and wishes of the owner(s).

Do I need a notice?
It is strongly recommended that you include one on your work, it will:

Announce that copyright exists in the work.
Make it clear who is the owner.
Deter infringement.
By having a copyright notice you are helping to prevent infringement occurring.

Where should the notice be placed?
The rule to adopt is to ensure that anyone with access to your work is aware of the copyright. If your work can be broken up into several pieces, then the notice should appear on each part. If it would normally be viewed as a whole then one will suffice.

If you are writing a book, you should only need one inside the front cover.
Leaflets, commercial documents, etc. should have one on each item.
Web pages should have one on every page.
In the music industry, one is placed on the CD, cassette or LP itself, and one is included on any accompanying sleeve or booklet.
Photographs and designs will have one at the bottom or on the reverse of the work
Manuscripts: A single notice on the front will normally suffice.
Include acknowledgements for any images, excerpts etc. that you have used which are not your own, and ensure that you obtain permission before you use anyone else’s work.

What does a notice consist of?
Copyright  
Some countries will not accept the symbol alone, they also require the word Copyright to appear in order to consider the notice valid. Using the word ensures that there can be no confusion.

©  
The normally recognised symbol. Most countries across the world accept this as the correct manner of displaying copyright.

Year of publication
In case of a dispute of ownership of a work, the date plays an important part. If your work was developed and published before any potential opponents then you can usually expect to win any case which challenges your rights.

In the case of work which is continually updated, (for example a web site), the year of publication may be shown as a period from first publication until the most recent update, (i.e. 2000-2004)

Copyright owner’s name
This may only be one person, or it may be a collective, a band, group or team for example.

If there is one person who owns the rights to a work, then his/her name will appear on its own. If however, your work is owned by several people then you may choose to include the name of each member of the collective, or include the name of the collective itself.

This would give your copyright notice the following appearance: Copyright © 2004 Bobby Smith.

Title of work (optional)
You may wish to include this if you have several small works under one title. You can put either the overall title of the work or the title of the smaller work in the notice. The title is normally placed at the beginning.

Phonogram rights in sound recordings  
Sound recordings have a right separate from the underlying musical composition, and a sound recordings should carry a phonogram copyright notice (denoted by the P in a circle) for the recording itself. The standard © notice should also be used, but in the case of sound recordings this is used to protect the cover design, lyric sheets or other printed material included with the sound recording.

In our example, this would give the appearance of the notice as Copyright © 2004 Bobby Smith,  2004 Bobby Smith.

Tip: On most computers the  symbol can be found within the Webdings font.

The information you have read so far gives you the minimum that both the Universal Copyright Convention and the UK Copyright Service suggest you include in your copyright notice. You may also wish to increase your notice in order to clarify any further wishes you have as the copyright owner, this is dealt with in the following sections.

Extending your copyright notice
Why extend your notice?
In some cases you may wish to permit certain activities, in others you may wish to make it clear that you are withholding all rights, or require the user to apply for a licence to carry out certain actions. To do this you should include a statement that explicitly sets out these terms, the statement should appear as a sentence after the copyright notice.

Wording your statement
There are several items to think about when wording your statement. Decide in relation to your work, what you wish to permit. Be specific in your wording, make it clear what you will allow and what is prohibited.

Probably the best starting place is to think from the point of view of withholding all rights and then carefully word any allowances as exceptions, making sure it is clear that these are the only allowances you will make.

Here are some areas to consider:

Copying, duplication, reproduction
The right to produce a copy of the work

Do you wish certain groups to be able to copy your work? if so what terms would you attach?

Selling, hiring
Normally this would be expressly forbidden without the copyright holders consent.

Distribution  
You may for example have written a shareware program which you will allow to be duplicated and distributed freely so long as you are identified as the author.

Commercial or personal use
Will you allow your work to be used differently by certain groups or individuals?

Educational or private study use is generally permitted under law in any case, but you may want to allow copying for private use but not for commercial gain.

Licenses  
For software, commercial and educational documents in particular, the copyright notice may carry information about obtaining a licence to reproduce the work.

By not obtaining a licence, use of the work may be considered in breach of copyright.

Right to be identified as the author
If for example, the work is distributed without your control, you will wish to ensure that you are still identified as the author/copyright owner.

Note: Acts done in the course of private research or study, criticism or news reporting do not normally constitute an infringement.

Examples of copyright statements
All rights reserved
A simple cover all statement. This is the most commonly used statement, and perhaps the clearest, and covers most eventualities. It simply means that you withhold all rights to the maximum extent allowable under law.

Any unauthorised broadcasting, public performance, copying or re-recording will constitute an infringement of copyright.
Another cover all statement, this one is designed for use on sound recordings, but can easily be adapted to apply to other types of work.

The wording makes it clear that the authors rights are taken very seriously. For maximum effect you can combine (a) and (b).

Permission granted to reproduce for personal and educational use only. Commercial copying, hiring, lending is prohibited.
For businesses and organisations this kind of statement can be of mutual benefit as allowing reproduction may help to promote their message.

May be used free of charge. Selling without prior written consent prohibited. Obtain permission before redistributing. In all cases this notice must remain intact.
This is the type of notice often used for software distributed as "freeware" or "shareware", by specifying that the copyright notice remains intact you ensure that all copies will identify you as the author.

Remember, copyright notices are straightforward statements, there is no need to get tied up with legal jargon, the point is to state your wishes clearly and succinctly.

Additional deterrent against infringement
Notice of registration
UKCS clients are also permitted to state that their work is registered.

This is an additional deterrent against infringement, by displaying the notice, you demonstrate that you are aware of your rights, that you take your rights seriously, and that you have very strong evidence with which to pursue a case if your work is infringed.

The notice would normally appear next to or below the copyright notice and state. ‘This work is registered with the UK Copyright Service.’ You may also include your registration number if you wish.
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89#

Bosa_nova兄是否找個中文版看看?
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