Protect copyright and refuse to pirate handwritten newspaper content.

Protect copyright and reject pirated manuscripts. The content is as follows:

Copyright, also known as "copyright", symbol:? . Refers to the rights enjoyed by the author or others (including legal persons) on a certain crop according to law.

According to the regulations, the author enjoys the following rights:

(1) publishing a work under a real name, pseudonym or unsigned name;

(2) protecting the integrity of the work;

(3) Revising a published work;

(4) Declaring to withdraw the published work due to the change of opinions or other legitimate reasons, but appropriately compensating the losses of the publishing unit;

(5) using a work in the form of publication, reproduction, broadcasting, performance, exhibition, shooting, translation or adaptation through legal channels;

(6) Obtaining economic remuneration for others' use of the work. If the above rights are infringed, the author or other copyright owner has the right to demand that the infringement be stopped and compensate for the losses.

Some special rights that authors enjoy according to law in literary, artistic and scientific works they create are also called copyrights. Without consent, others may not publish or modify it.

Lu Xun's letter to Hu: "But since it has been adapted, it can't be said that it infringes copyright."

Etymologically speaking, copyright means not only the right of reproduction, but also the ownership and control of the work itself and its carrier, sometimes used interchangeably with literary and artistic property rights.

English copyright is droit d'auteur in French, Urheberrecht in German and derecho de autor in Spanish. These nouns directly represent the beneficiaries of rights, and translated into Chinese is "the author's rights".

In order to protect the legitimate rights and interests of authors' works, coordinate the legal relationship between creators, communicators and the general public arising from the dissemination and use of works, encourage authors to create works, promote the dissemination of works and develop scientific and cultural undertakings, more than 150 countries and regions in the world have established copyright systems.