This case has been cited 1 times or more.
|
2011-02-08 |
PER CURIAM |
||||
| However, the failure to make such attribution does not violate the Law on Copyright.[12] The law expressly provides that Works of the Government are not subject to copyright.[13] This means that there is neither a legal right by anyone to demand attribution, nor any legal obligation from anyone to make an attribution, when Works of the Government are copied. The failure to make the proper attribution of a Work of the Government is not actionable but is merely a case of sloppy writing. Clearly, there is no legal obligation, by a judge or by any person, to make an attribution when copying Works of the Government. | |||||