Feudal emperors and local officials found that by examining the works to be printed, the spread of new ideas could be prohibited. 1556, Queen Mary I of England approved London printers to set up booksellers' companies, granting monopoly rights to books published by members of the company, but at the same time stipulated that books must be submitted to the royal review and registered with the company before they can be printed and distributed. Publishing without registration will be punished by the Royal Interstellar Court.
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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".
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