Moral rights: Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 20:49, 6 March 2004
Moral rights are a legal issue. In some countries, even when all rights are signed away, including even the moral rights, the moral rights remain with the creator anyway. For instance, in Canada, no contract can remove the right of a film-maker to sue for a presentation of his or her film that changes its meaning - that is a moral right that they retain.
Copyright is generally the only field of law where this really applies - there are usually no moral rights in a patent or trademark because those are not so closely associated to one person's individual capital. They are also not usually very strong for non-fiction. Whereas in a creative work, the artist's reputation as an artist may be on the line, affecting their future work or opportunities. In Canada this is considered part of the right of free expression along with various other rights such as wild gardening.
This troll-friendly legal attitude may be a factor in deciding where to locate some Consumerium Services or the jurisdiction referred in the Consumerium License. If it's desirable to retain moral rights, versus not, that would indicate the copyright contract must be in one type of place or another.