Record Details

“My Words, My Copyright”: Justifiability of Performer Owning ‘Speech’ or ‘Address’

NOPR - NISCAIR Online Periodicals Repository

View Archive Info
 
 
Field Value
 
Title “My Words, My Copyright”: Justifiability of Performer Owning ‘Speech’ or ‘Address’
 
Creator Kumar, Abhijeet
 
Subject Authors
Performers
Oral works
Speech
Address
Expressed Words
Copyright
First owner
Berne Convention
 
Description 79-90
The Indian Copyright Act, 1957 provides for exclusive rights to the creator of an intellectual piece, defined as work
under the Act, by granting certain rights for commercial exploitation of the same, for a limited period. The basic reading of
jurisprudence of copyright gives us two primary findings (required for the present research), i.e., there is a difference
between a work, and its author, and a performance, and its performer; and that the author may or may not be the owner of
the work. This further enunciates that the rights vested in the work and the performance is different from each other.
This understanding finds an exception in terms of the provisions laid down under the proviso Clause (cc) of Section 17,
which in effect talks about who shall be the first owner of a particular work. The preliminary understanding of the
provisions suggests that in the case of the speech or addresses, the performer will also become the ‘first owner’ of the work
itself and will enjoy the rights of Section 14 for literary work as well as the performance. There is no dispute that the author
of the work will be the person who creates the work, but the ownership is deemed to be of the person delivering the speech
or address, or of such other person who delivers it on behalf of someone else.
The present research aimsto understand the rationale behind the promulgation of such a provision through amendment,
which was passed with an objective to meet international obligations, with a discussion on its relevance in present times, and
tries to justify the existence of the situation, by specifically mentioning out the scenarios which can and cannot seek the
protection of this provision.
 
Date 2022-05-17T09:50:49Z
2022-05-17T09:50:49Z
2022-03
 
Type Article
 
Identifier 0975-1076 (Online); 0971-7544 (Print)
http://nopr.niscair.res.in/handle/123456789/59722
 
Language en
 
Publisher CSIR-NIScPR, India
 
Source JIPR Vol.27(2) [March 2022]