When the foreign state or nation of which such author is a citizen or subject grants, either by treaty, convention, agreement, or law, to citizens of the United States the benefit of copyright on substantially the same basis as to its own citizens... United States Congressional Serial Set - Page 671913Full view - About this book
| United States. Patent Office - Copyright - 1916 - 430 pages
...publication of his work; or (6) When the foreign state or nation of which such author or proprietor is n citizen or subject grants, either by treaty, convention,...United States the benefit of copyright on substantially tlw same basis as to its owu citizens, or copyright protection substantially equal to the protection... | |
| United States - Law - 1915 - 596 pages
...of a foreign author or composer unless the foreign state or nation of which such author or composer is a citizen or subject grants, either by treaty,...agreement, or law, to citizens of the United States similar rights.": (b) When the foreign state or nation of which such author or proprietor is a citizen... | |
| Francis Fisher Browne - American literature - 1891 - 416 pages
...this country, and its extension to the citizens of any country which permits or shall hereafter permit to citizens of the United States the benefit of copyright on substantially the same basis as its own citizens — the existence of this reciprocal condition in foreign countries to be determined... | |
| Canada - 1904 - 1152 pages
...Boutledge v. Low, LR 3 HL 100) ; and that the law of copyright in force in all British possessions permits to citizens of the United States the benefit of copyright on substantially the same basis as to British subjects." Accordingly, on 1st July, 1891. the President proclaimed that the subjects of Great... | |
| Literature - 1891 - 530 pages
...that in Belgium, France, Great Britain and the British possessions, and Switzerland, the law permits to citizens of the United States the benefit of copyright on substantially the same basis as to the citizens of those countries, Now, therefore, I, Benjamin Harrison, President of the United States... | |
| Literature - 1891 - 938 pages
...British subjects, as we are not bound by any treaty in the matter, and we should still be conceding to citizens of the United States the benefit of copyright on substantially the same basis as our own citizens. The Bern Convention has little or no direct bearing on these questions, inasmuch... | |
| Literature - 1891 - 524 pages
...United States of America the benefit of copyright on substantially the same basis as its own citizens; or when such foreign state or nation is a party to an international agreement which provides lor reciprocity in -the granting of a copyright, by the terms of which agreement the United States... | |
| Burke Aaron Hinsdale - United States - 1891 - 500 pages
...only when such state, by law, treaty, or international agreement, shall extend to American citizens the benefit of copyright on substantially the same basis as to its own citizens. 358. STEPS TO BE TAKEN. — The author or publisher of a copyrighted work must deliver at the office... | |
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