Our Services
These refer to the rights granted by law to authors of copyrighted works. The moral rights are part of the copyright as rights of a personal nature.
These refer to the rights that the author has over the work, namely rights that allow him to assign or license the work, either permanently or temporarily, giving him freedom to exploit it economically as he wishes.
These are rights parallel to, but not confused with, the rights of an author. They were created to protect the people (individuals or companies) who contribute to the processes of production and distribution of works protected by rights of a particular author, through a fair remuneration for the time and money invested.
For example, the rights of artists, performers and producers of a film or music, and to broadcasters, of a particular author.
Intellectual property is everything that results from the creation and externalization of the human mind. It is composed of two legal institutes: industrial property rights and copyright, such as literary works and trademarks.
Copyright covers intellectual creations in the literary, scientific and artistic domain, by any means exteriorized, in order to legally protect them.
Ideas, processes, systems, operational methods, concepts, principles or discoveries are not in themselves and as such protected under copyright law.
In the absence of a special provision, copyright expires 70 years after the death of the intellectual creator, even if the work was only published or disseminated posthumously.
Related Rights are the rights that the law grants to artists (performers), producers (of a film or music) and broadcasting organizations.
The protection of the work is extended to the title, regardless of registration, as long as it is original and cannot be confused with the title of any other work of the same genre by another author previously published or disseminated.
We are at your side, to help you and add value to your Intellectual Property!