All rights reserved


All Rights Reserved is a formula by which the copyright owner declares that a particular piece of work is not reproducible without his express permission.

In most countries, copyright laws do not require this term, but the formula persists, though it is probably referred to as "copyright" protection.

Once the affixing of the expression All Rights Reserved was required as a note that all copyrights were owned by the copyright holder and that there would be legal action against any breaches of the copyright copy right.

The text was requested after the 1910 Buenos Aires Convention, which required it to be included in order to guarantee copyright protection.

The equivalent phrase in other idioms: The need to add the note became obsolete on August 23, 2000, because every nation that was a member of the Buenos Aires Convention (which is the only copyrights treaty that requires it) is also a member of the Bern Convention which requires that security be guaranteed without a formal note specifying the right to copy.

The sentence can also be used when signing a contract to make the rights confidential. Other phrases that could be used are "without prejudice" or "under protest." Notemodify wikitesto Voices correlateemodify wikitesto

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