Commons:Urheberrechtsregeln nach Gebiet/Polen

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This page is a translated version of a page Commons:Copyright rules by territory/Poland and the translation is 55% complete. Changes to the translation template, respectively the source language can be submitted through Commons:Copyright rules by territory/Poland and have to be approved by a translation administrator.

Diese Seite bietet einen Überblick über die Urheberrechtsbestimmungen von Polen, die für das Hochladen von Werken in Wikimedia Commons relevant sind. Beachte, dass jedes Werk, das aus Polen stammt, sowohl in Polen als auch in den Vereinigten Staaten gemeinfrei oder unter einer freien Lizenz verfügbar sein muss, bevor es auf Wikimedia Commons hochgeladen werden kann. Bei Zweifeln über den urheberrechtlichen Status eines Werkes aus Polen solltest du die entsprechenden Gesetze zur Klärung heranziehen.

Geltende gesetzliche Bestimmungen

Polen ist seit dem 28. Januar 1920 Mitglied des Berner Übereinkommen, seit dem 1. Juli 1995 Mitglied der Welthandelsorganisation und am 23. März 2004 dem WIPO-Urheberrechtsvertrag beigetreten.[1]

Seit 2018 führt die Weltorganisation für geistiges Eigentum (WIPO), eine Unterorganisation der Vereinten Nationen, das Gesetz vom 4. Februar 1994 über das Urheberrecht und verwandte Schutzrechte (in der Fassung des Gesetzes vom 25. September 2015) als das wichtigste vom polnischen Gesetzgeber erlassene Gesetz zum Schutz des geistigen Eigentums auf.[2] Die WIPO hält den polnischen Text des Gesetzes ab 2015 mit einem automatischen Übersetzungstool in ihrer Datenbank WIPO Lex vor.[3] Die Gesetzgebung war rückwirkend und stellte das verfallene Urheberrecht wieder ein.[1996–2016 Art.124(3)]

Wikisource has an English translation of the original 1994 law.[4] Wikisource also has a Polish-language version as of 2016.[5] Tomasz Rychlicki provides information on some Polish copyright cases on his blog.

[6]

Allgemeine Regeln

Under the Consolidated 1994 Polish Copyright Law as of 2016,

  • Except as specified otherwise below, copyright expires 70 years from the author's death, or from the last surviving co-author's death with works of joint authorship.[1996–2016 Art.36(1)]
  • For anonymous or pseudonymous works copyright expires 70 years from date of first being made public, unless the pseudonym does not leave any doubts as to the author's identity or the author disclosed his identity.

[1996–2016 Art.36(2)]

  • For work to which copyrights are entitled by law to a person other than the author, copyright lasts 70 years from the date of being made public, or from the date of creation if it was not made public in this period.[1996–2016 Art.36(3)]
  • For in an audiovisual work, copyright lasts 70 years from the death of the last survivor of the the main director, author of the script, author of dialogues and composer of music composed for the audiovisual work.

[1996–2016 Art.36(4)]

  • For a musical work with words, if the words and music were composed specifically for this work, copyright lasts for 70 years from the death of the last survivor of the author of the words and composer of the music.[1996–2016 Art.36(5)]
  • The duration of copyright is counted in full years following the year in which the event occurred on which the duration is based.[1996–2016 Art.39]

Retroactive changes

Poland extended its copyright term to 50 years after the death of the author (or 50 years after publication for anonymous works) on May 23, 1994,[7] and then to 70 years on January 1, 2003.

This means that on the URAA date of January 1, 1996, the shorter term of 50 years was still valid. However, some of these works then became re-copyrighted in 2003 within Poland (and later the European Union) as the term extension explicitly also applied to works on which the copyright had already expired.

For photographs, the situation was different:

  • According to the Article 21 of the Copyright law of March 29, 1926 (valid until 1952) photographs lost copyright protection ten years after the picture was taken. Series of scientific or artistic pictures lost copyright protection after 50 years.[8]
  • According to Article 27 of the Copyright law of July 10, 1952 (valid until May 23, 1994) photographs and series of photographs lost copyright protection ten years after their publication date.[9]
  • However, the retroactive Polish Copyright Law of February 4, 1994, Article 124, put all those images back under copyright protection for 50 years since the death of the author.
  • An amendment passed in late 2002, effective January 1, 2003, retroactively extended terms to 70 years after the death of an author.

Nicht geschützt

Abkürzung

Siehe auch: Commons:Ungeschützte Werke

Under the Consolidated 1994 Polish Copyright Law as of 2016, copyright protection does not cover:[1996–2016 Art.4]

  1. normative acts and drafts thereof as well as official documents
  2. official documents, materials, signs and symbols;
  3. published patent or protection descriptions;
  4. simple press information.

However in some instances the use of an image published by the government in Poland might be regulated by other laws. It is being debated if postage stamps and banknotes fall into this category. (See: {{PD-Polishsymbol}})

According to 2016 court decision photographs of maps, documents, medals, memorial plates do not enjoy their own copyrights.[10]

In the judgment of 27 February 2009 (V CSK 337/2008), the Supreme Court of Poland stated: "The official materials referred to in Article 4 §2 of the [Polish] Copyright Law Act should be understood as materials coming from an office or other institution performing public tasks."

[11]

Additionally all content published on www.gov.pl is under Creative-Commons Attribution 3.0 license.

Lizenzvorlagen

Siehe auch: Commons:Lizenzvorlagen

Währung

Siehe auch: Commons:Währung

 Nicht OK. Polish National Bank requires written permission for reproduction of Polish banknotes and coins which are legal tender on the territory of the Republic of Poland in physical or electronic form.

[12]

Panoramafreiheit

Siehe auch: Commons:Panoramafreiheit

OK. {{FoP-Poland}} (exterior only)

The copyright act from February 4, 1994 in article 33 point 1 allows one to propagate works that are permanently exhibited on the publicly accessible roads, streets, squares or gardens provided that the propagation is not for the same use. The name of the creator and source should be provided if it is possible by article 34. This use is royalty free, provided that it does not harm the legitimate interests of the creator by article 34.

Briefmarken

Siehe auch: Commons:Briefmarken

Unclear According to Article 4, case 2 of the Polish Copyright Law Act of February 4, 1994 "normative acts and drafts thereof as well as official documents, materials, signs and symbols are not subject to copyrights". Such materials should use {{PD-Polishsymbol}}. Unfortunately it is unclear if Polish stamps and banknotes are considered official materials, signs or symbols by Polish law. In 2009 about 900 files with Polish stamps were deleted (see Commons talk:Stamps/Archive 1#Polish stamps are copyrighted for the discussion).

Threshold of originality

Siehe auch: Commons:Schöpfungshöhe


Per Tomasz Targosz (Institute of Intellectual Property Law, Jagiellonian University Kraków):

Polish copyright law has quite a long tradition of setting the threshold rather low, which may encourage frivolous lawsuits forcing courts to ponder whether simple graphic designs, short lines of text or even names should or should not be protected by copyright law.[13]

Siehe auch

Zitate

  1. Poland Copyright and Related Rights (Neighboring Rights). WIPO: World Intellectual Property Organization (2018). Retrieved on 2018-11-13.
  2. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named Polen-WIPO
  3. Act of February 4, 1994, on Copyright and Related Rights (as amended up Act of September 25, 2015). Poland (2015). Retrieved on 2018-11-13.
  4. An English translation of the copyright act at Wikisource
  5. The original text of the copyright act at Wikisource (in Polish)
  6. Polish case law on copyright (in English) (9 December 2009, Tomasz Rychlicki). Retrieved on 2019-02-07.
  7. Original version of the February 4, 1994 law
  8. Copyright law of March 29, 1926 (In Polish)
  9. Copyright law of July 10, 1952 (In Polish)
  10. SA: nie każde zdjęcie podlega ochronie, 30 January 2017
  11. Wstępne stanowisko Polskiej Izby Książki (in Polish). Supreme Court of Poland. Retrieved on 2019-03-29. "Pod pojęciem materiałów urzędowych, o których mowa w art. 4 ust. 2 Pr.autor. rozumieć należy materiały pochodzące od urzędu lub innej instytucji wykonującej zadania publiczne."
  12. Good practice in the reproduction of images of banknotes and coins. Polish National Bank. Retrieved on 2019-03-29.
  13. Supreme Court, 22.06.2010, IV CSK 459/09 – Subject matter of copyright (in English) (2011-04-11). Retrieved on 2019-11-08.
Caution: The above description may be inaccurate, incomplete and/or out of date, so must be treated with caution. Before you upload a file to Wikimedia Commons you should ensure it may be used freely. Siehe auch: Commons:Allgemeiner Haftungsausschluss