| Term | Definition |
|
intentional and inadvertant |
two types of plagerism |
|
intentional |
you know it is someone else's |
|
inadvertant |
cite incorrectly |
|
copyright |
right that must be protect an idea, expression, or information |
|
music, art, photos, movies, literary work |
what they protect |
|
modify, copy, distribute, display, perform |
five rights |
|
license |
give someone the right to your work |
|
public domain |
public property, belongs to no one |
|
fair use |
work that can be used for educational purposes |
|
patents |
protect inventions |
|
trademarks |
indicates some business or organization |
|
trade secret |
secret information concerning practices or knowledge which can't be shared with the public |
|
intellectual property |
product of the mind or intellect |
|
DRM |
Digital Rights movement (protects intellectual property) |
|
reverse engineering |
taking something apart and putting it back together to determine how it works |