Commons:Urheberrechtsregeln nach Gebiet/Argentinien

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This page is a translated version of a page Commons:Copyright rules by territory/Argentina and the translation is 66% complete. Changes to the translation template, respectively the source language can be submitted through Commons:Copyright rules by territory/Argentina and have to be approved by a translation administrator.

Diese Seite bietet einen Überblick über die Urheberrechtsbestimmungen von Argentinien, die für das Hochladen von Werken in Wikimedia Commons relevant sind. Beachte, dass jedes Werk, das aus Argentinien stammt, sowohl in Argentinien als auch in den Vereinigten Staaten gemeinfrei oder unter einer freien Lizenz verfügbar sein muss, bevor es auf Wikimedia Commons hochgeladen werden kann. Bei Zweifeln über den urheberrechtlichen Status eines Werkes aus Argentinien solltest du die entsprechenden Gesetze zur Klärung heranziehen.

Hintergrund

Argentinien ist seit Anfang des 19. Jahrhunderts ein unabhängiger Staat.

Argentinien ist seit dem 13. Februar 1958 Mitglied des Welturheberrechtsabkommens, seit dem 10. Juni 1967 des Berner Übereinkommen, seit dem 1. Januar 1995 der Welthandelsorganisation und am 6. März 2002 dem WIPO-Urheberrechtsvertrag beigetreten.[1]

Seit 2018 führt die Weltorganisation für geistiges Eigentum (WIPO), eine Unterorganisation der Vereinten Nationen, das Gesetz Nr. 11.723 vom 28. September 1933 über die Regelung des geistigen Eigentums (Urheberrechtsgesetz, geändert bis zum Gesetz Nr. 26.570 vom 25. November 2009) als das wichtigste vom argentinischen Gesetzgeber erlassene Urheberrechtsgesetz auf.[1] Die WIPO verfügt über den Text dieses Gesetzes in ihrer Datenbank WIPO Lex.[2]

Allgemeine Regeln

According to Law No. 11.723 as amended up to Law No. 26.570 of November 25, 2009,

  • Ownership of intellectual works shall fall to the authors thereof during their lifetime, and to their heirs or legal successors for 70 years starting from January 1 of the year following the author's death.[11.723/2009 Article 5]
  • With works of collaboration, this term shall begin from January 1 of the year following the death of the last collaborating party.[11.723/2009 Article 5]
  • For posthumous works, the 70-year term shall begin from January 1 of the year following the death of the author.[11.723/2009 Article 5]
  • Ownership of intellectual performances fixed on phonograms shall fall to the performers for the period of 70 years starting from January 1 of the year following publication.[11.723/2009 Article 5bis]
  • The ownership of anonymous intellectual works belonging to institutions, corporations or legal persons shall last for 50 years from the date of publication of those works.[11.723/2009 Article 8]
  • For photographic works, the duration of the right of ownership shall be 20 years from the date of first publication.[11.723/2009 Article 34]
    • The Berne convention also requires protection for at least 25 years from creation of artistic photographs and works of applied art.[11.723/2009 Article 7(4)]
  • For cinematographic works, the right of ownership shall be 50 years from the death of the last of the collaborators listed in Article 20 of this Law.[11.723/2009 Article 34]

Historical changes in durations

  • The original copyright law of Argentina (Ley 11.723) from September 30, 1933 had a general copyright term of 30 years p.m.a.
  • In 1957, this was increased to 50 years p.m.a. by Decreto-Ley 12.063/57, published in the Boletin Oficial on October 11, 1957.
  • In 1997, the term was again increased to 70 years p.m.a. by Ley 24.870, published in the Boletin Oficial on September 16, 1997. This extension to 70 years re-copyrighted works on which the earlier 50-year term had already expired, but the new 70-year term had not expired yet (see Ley 24.870, or art. 84 of the current Argentine copyright law).
  • For photographic works the duration of copyright is twenty years from the date of the first publication (article 34 of last version of 11723 law, updated (August 13, 1998) by law 24249 art 1).[3]

Lizenzvorlagen

Abkürzung

Siehe auch: Commons:Lizenzvorlagen

Währung

Siehe auch: Commons:Währung

 Nicht OK. There is no exception for currency in the Argentine copyright law.

Panoramafreiheit

Siehe auch: Commons:Panoramafreiheit

Argentina has no "freedom of panorama" provision in its copyright law. At least some think there is de facto freedom of panorama in Argentina regarding buildings:

  • It is uncontroversially accepted that buildings can be reproduced by paintings or photographs, without this reproduction infringing copyright.
  • Se ha admitido pacificamente que los edificios puedan ser reproducidos mediante pinturas o fotografías, sin estimarse que esta reproducción lesione los derechos de autor. - Dr. Emery, Miguel Angel (professor of Intellectual property law in Argentina)[4]

In accordance with this discussion from July 2010, this de facto freedom of panorama for architecture in Argentina is acceptable on Wikimedia Commons:

  • OK for buildings {{FoP-Argentina}}
  •  Nicht OK for sculpture and other works

As recent as 2022, this de facto freedom of panorama for Argentine architecture is brought to some skepticism, see these relevant discussions from December 2022 and from September 2023.

Infojustice.org tells of a proposal in 2017 to add more limitations/exceptions for Law No. 11.723, one of which would have been a freedom of panorama provision. Instead, most of the suggested exceptions were abolished, and the only surviving exception to be passed concerns free uses of works for persons with disabilities (PWDs), as proven by the resulting amendment law, Law No. 27.588 of November 11, 2020, on Amendments to Law No. 11.723 (WIPO copy).

Briefmarken

Siehe auch: Commons:Briefmarken

Copyrighted The basic copyright law of Argentina is Law No. 11.723 of September 28, 1933, on Legal Intellectual Property Regime (Copyright Law, as last amended by Law No. 26.570 of November 25, 2009). There is no mention of stamps or official works in the law, but Article 8 (as translated) says that "The ownership of anonymous intellectual works belonging to institutions, corporations or legal persons shall last for 50 years from the date of publication of those works." The government of Argentina is an institution and not a natural person so assume that where a stamp is anonymous, it is out of copyright after 50 years. Use {{PD-AR-Anonymous}} where applicable. If the designer of the stamp is shown, the stamp will remain in copyright for seventy years after death.

Schöpfungshöhe

Siehe auch: Commons:Schöpfungshöhe

The creations are subject to a threshold of originality that distinguishes them from others by giving their personal imprint.[5]

Siehe auch

Zitate

  1. a b Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named Argentinien-WIPO
  2. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named Gesetz2009
  3. Art. 34 Law 11723 del September 28, 1933, as modified by Ley 24870 Septiembre 11, 1997, as amended by Law 25006 B.O. 13/8/1998.
  4. Emery, Miguel Angel (1999) Propiedad Intelectual (4th ed.), Astrea Editors, p. 40
  5. Cerlalc (25 July 2007). La obra. Originalidad. Marco conceptual Existencia del derecho (in Spanish). Retrieved on 2021-10-22.

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Caution: The above description may be inaccurate, incomplete and/or out of date, so must be treated with caution. Before you upload a file to Wikimedia Commons you should ensure it may be used freely. Siehe auch: Commons:Allgemeiner Haftungsausschluss