The method of making hamburgers, news time, and diving movements are not protected by copyright law.
According to Article 3 of the "Copyright Law of the People's Republic of China", works referred to in the Copyright Law include literature, art and natural sciences, social sciences, engineering technology, etc. created in the following forms Works:
1. Written works;
2. Oral works;
3. Music, drama, folk art, dance, acrobatic art works;
4. Art and architectural works;
5. Photographic works;
6. Film works and works created using methods similar to filmmaking;
< p>7. Graphic works and model works such as engineering design drawings, product design drawings, maps, schematic diagrams;8. Computer software;
9. Others specified by laws and administrative regulations work.
Therefore, the three items in the question are not within the scope of protection of copyright law, but the method of making hamburgers can be protected by patent law.
Extended information:
Copyright used to be called copyright. The world's first copyright law, the British "Anna Act", began to protect the rights of authors. In 1791, France promulgated the "Performance Rights Law" and began to attach importance to protecting the author's performance rights. In 1793, the "Author's Rights Act" was promulgated, and the rights of authors received further attention.
The first copyright law in Chinese history was the "Copyright Law of the Qing Dynasty" promulgated in 1910. The first copyright law of the People's Republic of China, the "Copyright Law of the People's Republic of China", was adopted and implemented at the 15th meeting of the Standing Committee of the Seventh National People's Congress on September 7, 1990.
According to the Copyright Law, within the territory of the People's Republic of China, all works by Chinese citizens, legal persons or unincorporated entities enjoy copyright regardless of whether they are published; works by foreigners are first published in China , also enjoy copyright in accordance with the Copyright Law; works published by foreigners outside China enjoy copyright in accordance with the agreement signed between their country and China or international treaties to which the country is a party.
Baidu Encyclopedia—Copyright Law of the People’s Republic of China
Baidu Encyclopedia—Copyright