How Does Copyright Basics: Crash Course Intellectual Property #2 Work?

Copyright is like giving your favorite toy a special sticker so no one else can take it and say it’s theirs.

Imagine you draw a picture of a dinosaur on a piece of paper. That drawing is your creation, just like how you made your own castle out of blocks. Copyright means you get to keep that dinosaur picture all to yourself, or at least you get first pick when someone wants to use it.

When you have copyright, you’re like the boss of your drawing. You can decide if other people can copy it, like when you let your friend borrow your crayons to draw their own dinosaur. But if they copy your dinosaur without asking, that’s like taking your toy and saying it's theirs.

Copyright usually lasts for a long time, as long as you’re alive and then some more. It’s kind of like how your favorite stuffed bear stays with you through all your adventures, even when you grow up. So if you draw that dinosaur today, it might still be yours when you're 100!

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Examples

  1. A kid draws a picture, and no one can copy it without asking.
  2. A song is protected so others can't use it without permission.
  3. An author writes a book, and no one else can publish the same story.

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