What is the difference between copyright and copyright?

what's the difference between copyright and copyright? In our real life, general copyright is equivalent to copyright. But from the source of these two technical terms, there are still many differences between them. What's the difference between copyright and copyright? The translation of copyright into English is copyright, which belongs to the legal system of Britain, France and the United States. From the direct translation of its original English words into the right to copy, we can see that copyright was originally established to prohibit others from copying their works without the permission of the obligee, thus causing economic losses to the obligee. In the legal system, it does not belong to natural rights, and of course, natural human rights are not applicable, but one of the policies used to stimulate writers and others to make artistic creation. The focus is on safeguarding the economic rights and interests of the obligee, so it can be seen that the focus is on safeguarding the economic rights and interests of the obligee, that is, the work is just one of the ways of property existence, which has nothing to do with the author's values and spiritual world, so it can be transferred at will. It is worth mentioning that if a buyer hires a writer to create a work, then the work belongs to the buyer, not the writer himself. In some countries that use the Anglo-French-American system, the buyer is even considered as the author. Copyright is one of the concepts of the mainland legal system, and copyright is one of the concepts of the mainland legal system. It can be seen that the work is regarded as the display of the author's personality and spiritual world, rather than directly materialized as one of the author's properties. Therefore, in the copyright law, there are many restrictions on the transfer of works. Because this already belongs to the category of personal rights, and personal rights are generally not transferable. And the same buyer hires a writer to create a work, without special circumstances, the copyright still belongs to the author, and the buyer can only use the work through the authorization of the author. However, due to the continuous development of Berne Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic Works, countries with two legal systems have also joined, and the concepts of the two have been continuously integrated, and the gap is gradually narrowing. It is worth noting that although the laws of our country stipulate that copyright and copyright are synonymous, they are detailed in the used civil law system.