Proponents of the tangible-object theory of copyright argue that copyright and similar intellectual-property rights can be explained as logical extensions of the right to own concrete, tangible objects. βββ
Proponents Β·of tangible-object theory of copyright
Copyrights and IP are logical extensions of the right to own concrete, tangible objects.
This is an Inference question from the perspective of the supporters of the tangible-object theory. The views of the supporters of the tangible-object theory can be found throughout the passageββremember that they think that all copyrightable works can have a physical representation, and their theory doesnβt require us to accept that abstract, intangible things can be owned.
a
A literary work ββββββ βββββββ βββββββββ ββββββββββ ββββββ ββ ββββββ ββ ββ βββββββ ββββββββ ββ ββ βββββββββββ ββββββββββ
Unsupported. The physical representation of the work doesnβt need to be produced by an established publisherββthe work just needs to have some tangible representation in general.
Unsupported. The passage doesnβt tell us how legal systems in the real world approach this issue, so we cannot make an inference about what most legal systems rely on.
Unsupported. There is no indication in the passage that the right to copy is limited to the right to copy for profit.
d
Some works deserving ββ βββββββββ ββββββββββ ββββββ ββββββ ββ ββββββββββ ββ βββββββββ ββββββββ ββββββββ
Anti-supported. This is actually what the author believes. The tangible-object theory depends on the claim that all copyrightable works can have a physical representation.
This is supported in P3. According to the supporters of the tangible-object theory, a benefit of the theory is that the law can protect intellectual property rights without citing the idea that abstract ideas can be owned.
Difficulty
55% of people who answer get this correct
This is a very difficult question.
It is slightly harder than the average question in this passage.
CURVE
Score of students with a 50% chance of getting this right
25%155
162
75%170
Analysis
Implied
Otherβs perspective
Critique or debate
Law
Answer Popularity
PopularityAvg. score
a
8%
160
b
20%
160
c
5%
159
d
12%
159
e
55%
167
Question history
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