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Dear Customers or Visitors,
Recently we see on Internet diffamation against our website we see that different organization including the government of India, maligned our reputation saying false and defamatory allegations against our company and service. Copyright.in is owned by an European Company based in France. Our company provide digital timestamping of your creation by sending all your creation to a ministerial officer in realtime (public notary, bailiff), the officer making certain date on your deposit. This certified date emitted by a public officer of a country member of the Bern Convention give you if your creation is original : "A proof of anteriority on the creation" it's a "copyright on your creation", To be more clear, any member (country) that signed the Bern Convention have legitimity to give this kind of document, and the proof emitted and certified by official minister (public notary bailiff) is valid in all these countries .( List of countries here : http://www.wipo.int/treaties/en/ShowResults.jsp?treaty_id=15).To the ministry of commerce of India The Berne Convention formally mandated several aspects of modern copyright law; it introduced the concept that a copyright exists the moment a work is "fixed", rather than requiring registration. It also enforces a requirement that countries recognize copyrights held by the citizens of all other signatory countries. The Berne Convention deals with the protection of works and the rights of their authors. It is based on three basic principles and contains a series of provisions determining the minimum protection to be granted, as well as special provisions available to developing countries that want to make use of them. The Appendix to the Paris Act of the Convention also permits developing countries to implement non-voluntary licenses for translation and reproduction of works in certain cases, in connection with educational activities. In these cases, the described use is allowed without the authorization of the right holder, subject to the payment of remuneration to be fixed by the law. The Convention relies on the concept of "country of origin". Often determining the country of origin is straightforward: when a work is published in a signatory country and nowhere else, this is the country of origin . However, under Article 5(4), when a work is published simultaneously in several signatory countries (under Article 3(4), "simultaneously" is defined as "within 30 days" , the country with the shortest term of protection is defined as the country of origin. Although the Berne Convention states that the copyright law of the country where copyright is claimed shall be applied, Article 7(8) states that "unless the legislation of that country otherwise provides, the term shall not exceed the term fixed in the country of origin of the work. The Berne Convention authorizes countries to allow "fair" uses of copyrighted works in other publications or broadcasts.[8][9] Implementations of this part of the treaty fall into the broad categories of fair use and fair dealing. Information Center Copyright.in
Date :
Author : Pandorish Babachir