Copyright Act of 1790
The Copyright Act of 1790 was passed due to the Constitution's empowerment of the newly created Congress to "promote the progress of Science and the Useful Arts by securing for limited times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive right to their respective Writings and Discoveries," as may be found in Article 1, Section 8, Clause 8. As thus implemented by Congress, the new copyright law was conceived as serving the dual purpose of protecting and encouraging authors' activities in creating new books, maps, and charts, and securing the access of the public to the products of authors' labors. The former task took the form of the granting of a monopoly over a work to the person who had created it, and the latter task the form of limiting the extent of such monopolies and defining which works could not fall under them. The initial application made under the Copyright Act of 1790 would therefore secure exclusive rights to the author for publishing and reproducing lasting a period of fourteen years. After that time, if the author or his or her heirs still happened to be living, another fourteen-year term of protection would be granted, though contingent on the author or heir submitting an application for such protection. The language of the Copyright Act of 1790 is primarily based on the utilitarian emphasis placed on benefiting society as a whole, rather than on a model based on commerce.
The Copyright Act of 1790 did not require that a book, chart, or map be published in order to be eligible for receiving legal protection. It did require, however, that authors formally apply for a copyright. Otherwise their work could pass into the public domain. In the absence of international agreements on copyright law, these legal measures did not extend to works published or authors working in other countries.
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