Copyright is not a patent, and the two concepts are different. Copyright refers to the rights enjoyed by authors of literary, artistic and scientific works. A patent is an invention protected by legal norms. It is an invention-creation that applies to the national examination and approval authority for a patent and is granted the exclusive right to invent within a specified time after passing the examination according to law.
Legal objectivity:
Article 10 of China's Copyright Law stipulates that copyright includes personal rights and property rights of works. (a) personal rights (also known as moral rights), including: (1) the right to publish, that is, the right to decide whether a work is public, and the author has the right to publish or not to publish his work on different occasions; (2) The right of authorship means the right to indicate the identity of the author and sign his name on the work. The author can sign his real name or pseudonym, or not, or sign it later; (3) the right to modify, that is, the right to modify or authorize others to modify a work; For example, authorize the publishing house to edit and modify; (4) the right to protect the integrity of the work, that is, the right to protect the work from distortion and tampering; Others shall not split, take it out of context, distort or tamper with it; (2) Property rights (economic rights): the right to use and the right to receive remuneration; Obtain economic benefits by copying, translating, adapting, performing, playing, exhibiting, making movies, television or recording. (5) the right of reproduction, that is, the right to make one or more copies of a work by digital or non-digital means such as printing, copying, copying, rubbing, recording, video recording, copying and remaking; (6) the right of distribution, that is, the right to provide the original or duplicate of a work to the public by way of sale or gift; (7) the right to rent, that is, the right to authorize others to temporarily use film works, works created by methods similar to filming, and computer software, except that the program in the computer software itself is not the main object of rent: (8) the right to exhibit, that is, the right to publicly display the original or duplicate of artistic works and photographic works; (9) The right to perform, that is, the right to directly and publicly reproduce the work through the voice, expression and movements of the actors, and indirectly and publicly reproduce the work or the performance of the work through technical equipment such as projectors, tape recorders and video recorders; (10) the right to show, that is, the right to publicly copy art, photography, movies and works created by methods similar to filming through projectors, slide projectors and other technical equipment; (1 1) The right to broadcast, that is, the right to broadcast or disseminate works in public by wireless means, the right to broadcast works to the public by wired transmission or rebroadcasting, and the right to broadcast works to the public by loudspeakers or other similar tools for transmitting symbols, sounds and images; -12 information network communication right, that is, the right to provide works to the public by wired or wireless means, so that the public can obtain works at the time and place they choose; (13) the right to make a film, that is, the right to fix the work on the carrier for the first time by making a film or by similar means; (14) the right of adaptation, that is, the right to change the expression of the original work on the basis of the original work and create a new work with originality; (15) Translation right, that is, the right to convert the original from one language to another; (16) The right to assemble refers to the right to assemble a work or a fragment of a work into a new work through selection or arrangement. (17) Other rights that copyright owners should enjoy. The copyright owner may, in accordance with the agreement or the relevant provisions of this law, license others to exercise the property rights in copyright and get remuneration. The copyright owner may transfer all or part of the property rights in his copyright.