Library/PT 130/Sec 2/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

Supporters of the tangible-object theory say copyright is like owning a physical thing: if you make a physical copy of a work you own that object and can control what happens to it, and you can even keep some rights when you transfer the object (like a landowner keeping easements). They claim copyright simply records which rights the creator retains, such as the right to copy or to allow performances. Critics say this view fails for short-lived things like live broadcasts and ignores that the idea itself can be the valuable part—for example, if a poet dictates a poem and a friend writes it down, the friend made the paper copy but the poet created the poem and should have the rights.

Logic Breakdown

Apply the passage's rule that the person who creates a tangible object from materials they own becomes its owner; map the poet/friend example onto the inventor/engineer scenario (engineer = friend, inventor = poet).

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

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17.

Suppose an inventor describes an innovative idea for an invention to an engineer, who volunteers to draft specifications for a prototype and then produces the prototype using the engineer's own materials. Which one of the following statements would apply to this case under the tangible-object theory of intellectual property, as the author describes that theory?

Correct Answer
A
Correct. The passage states that "In creating a new and original object from materials that one owns, one becomes the owner of that object and thereby acquires all of the rights that ownership entails." It gives an explicit analogy: "Suppose that a poet dictates a new poem to a friend, who writes it down on paper that the friend has supplied. The creator of the tangible object in this case is not the poet but the friend, and there would seem to be no ground for the poet's claiming copyright unless the poet can be said to already own the ideas expressed in the work." By that logic, the engineer who drafts specifications and produces the prototype using his own materials is the creator/owner of the tangible prototype and therefore is entitled to claim the invention as intellectual property.
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