Article 1 These Regulations are formulated in
accordance with the Copyright Law of the People's Republic of China, for the
purposes of protecting the rights and interests of copyright owners of computer
software, regulating the relationship of interests generated in the
development, dissemination and use of computer software, encouraging the
development and application of computer software, and promoting the development
of software industry and the informatization of national economy.
Article 2 For the purposes of these
Regulations, the term "computer software" (hereinafter referred to as
"software") means computer programs and relevant documents.
Article 3 For the purposes of these Regulations, the
following definitions apply:
(1) "computer program" means a coded
instruction sequence which may be executed by devices with information
processing capabilities such as computers, or a symbolic instruction sequence
or symbolic statement sequence which may be automatically converted into a
coded instruction sequence for the purpose of obtaining certain expected
results; the source program and object program of a computer program shall be
deemed as one and the same work;
(2) "documents" means literal descriptions or
charts used to describe the content, structure, design, functional performance,
historical development, test results and usage, such as program design
instructions, flowcharts, and user's manuals;
(3) "software developer" means a legal entity
or other organization that actually organizes, or directly carries out, the
development of a piece of software and assumes responsibility for the
accomplished software, or a natural person who independently completes, relying
on his own conditions, the development of a piece of software and assumes
responsibility therefor;
(4) "software copyright owner" means a natural
person, legal entity or other organization that enjoys software copyright in
accordance with these Regulations.
Article 4 The software protected under these
Regulations must be developed independently by the developer and fixed on
tangible medium.
Article 5 Chinese citizens, legal entities or other
organizations enjoy, in accordance with these Regulations, copyright in the
software which they have developed, whether published or not.
Foreigners or stateless persons having software first
published within the territory of the People's Republic of China enjoy
copyright in accordance with these Regulations.
Software copyright enjoyed by foreigners or stateless
persons under an agreement concluded between China and the country to which
they belong to or in which they have their habitual residences, or, under an
international treaty acceded to by China, is protected in accordance with these
Regulations.
Article 6 The protection of software copyright under
these Regulations shall not extend to the ideas, processing, operating methods,
mathematical concepts or the like used in software development.
Article 7 A software copyright owner may register
with the software registration institution recognized by the copyright
administration department of the State Council. A registration certificate
issued by the software registration institution is a preliminary proof of the
registered items.
Fees shall be paid for software registration. The
charging standards for software registration shall be provided for by the
copyright administration department of the State Council jointly with the
competent department for pricing of the State Council.
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Chapter
II Software
Copyright
Article 8 A software copyright owner shall enjoy the
following rights:
(1) the right of divulgation, that is, the right to
decide whether to make the software available to the public;
(2) the right of developer-ship, that is, the right to
claim developer's identity and to have the developer's name mentioned in
connection with the software;
(3) the right of alteration, that is, the right to
supplement or abridge the software, or to change the sequence of instructions
or statements;
(4) the right of reproduction, that is, the right to
produce one or more copies of the software;
(5) the right of distribution, that is, the right to
provide the original copy or reproductions of the software to the public by
selling or donating;
(6) the right of rental, that is, the right to authorize
others to use temporarily and onerously the original copy or reproductions of
the software, except where the software itself is not the essential object of
the rental;
(7) the right of communication through information
network, that is, the right to make the software available to the public by
wire or wireless means so that members of the public may have access to the
software from a place and at a time individually chosen by them;
(8) the right of translation, that is, the right to
converse the natural language of the software into another natural language;
and
(9) other rights which shall be enjoyed by software
copyright owners.
A software copyright owner may authorize others to
exploit his copyright, and has a right to receive remuneration.
A software copyright owner may transfer, wholly or in
part, his copyright, and has a right to receive remuneration.
Article 9 Except where otherwise provided in these
Regulations, the copyright in a piece of software belongs to its developer.
The natural person, legal entity or other organization
whose name is mentioned in connection with a piece of software shall, in the
absence of proof to the contrary, will be its developer.
Article 10 Where a piece of software is
developed jointly by two or more natural persons, legal entities or other
organizations, the copyright ownership shall be agreed upon in a written
contract between the co-developers. Where, in the absence of a written contract
or an explicit agreement in the contract, the joint software can be separated
into independent parts and exploited separately, each co-developer may enjoy
independent copyright in the part which he has developed, but the exploitation
of such copyright shall not extend to the copyright in the joint software as a
whole. Where the joint software cannot be separated into independent parts and
exploited separately, its copyright is enjoyed jointly by those co-developers
and exploited by agreement. In the absence of such an agreement, any
co-developer shall not prevent, without justification, the other(s) from
exploiting the copyright except the right of transfer; however, the profit
received for exploiting the joint software shall be reasonably shared between
all the co-developers.
Article 11 Where a piece of software is developed on
commission, the copyright ownership shall be agreed upon in a written contract
between the commissioning and the commissioned parties. In the absence of a
written contract or an explicit agreement in the contract, the copyright shall
be enjoyed by the commissioned party.
Article 12 Where a piece of software is developed
under a task assigned by a State organ, the ownership and exploitation of its
copyright shall be stipulated in a letter of project assignment or a contract.
In the absence of an explicit stipulation in the letter of project assignment
or the contract, the copyright shall be enjoyed by the legal entity or other
organization that has accepted the task.
Article 13 Where a piece of software developed
by a natural person working in a legal entity or other organization in the
course of his service involves one of the following circumstances, the
copyright therein shall be enjoyed by such legal entity or organization, which
may reward the natural person for the development of the software:
(1) the software is developed based on the development
objective explicitly designated in the line of his service duty;
(2) the software is a foreseeable or natural result of
his work activities in the line of his service duty; or
(3) the software is developed mainly with the material
and technical resources of the legal entity or other organization, such as
funds, special equipment or unpublished special information, and the legal
entity or other organization assumes the responsibility therefor.
Article 14 The software copyright shall exist from
the date on which its development has been completed.
In the case of software copyright of a natural person,
the term of protection shall be the lifetime of such person and fifty years
after his death, expiring on December 31 of the fiftieth year after his death.
In the case of a piece of joint software, the term of protection shall expire
on December 31 of fiftieth year after the death of the last surviving
developer.
In the case of software copyright a legal entity or other
organization, the term of protection shall be fifty years, expiring on December
31 of the fiftieth year after the first publication of such software; however,
if any such software has not been published within fifty years from the date on
which its development has been completed, it shall be no longer protected under
these Regulations.
Article 15 Where software copyright belongs to a
natural person, his successer(s) may, after his death, inherit the rights
provided for in Article 8 of these Regulations except the right of
developer-ship, during the term of protection provided for in these Regulations,
in accordance with the succession Law of the People's Republic of China.
Where software copyright belongs to a legal entity or
other organization, the copyright shall, after the change or the termination of
the legal entity or other organization, be enjoyed, during the term of
protection provided for in these Regulations, by the legal entity or other
organization that has taken over the former's rights and obligations, or, in
the absence of such entity or organization, by the State.
Article 16 Owners of lawful copies of a piece of
software enjoy the following rights:
(1) to install and store the software in devices with
information processing capabilities, such as computers, according to the need
of their use;
(2) to make backup copies against damage, provided that
such owners do not offer others in any way the backup copies for their use and
that they destroy such copies once they lose the ownership thereof; and
(3) to make necessary alterations to the software in
order to implement it in an actual environment of computer application or to
improve its functions or performance, provided that such owners do not, except
otherwise agreed in the contract, offer any third party the altered software
without permission from the software copyright owner.
Article 17 A piece of software may be used by its
installing, displaying, transmitting or storing for the purposes of studying or
researching the design ideas or principles embodied therein, without permission
from, and without payment of remuneration, to the software copyright owner.
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Chapter
III Software
Copyright Licensing and Transfer
Article 18 In the case of a license to exploit
software copyright, the parties shall conclude a licensing contract.
The licensee shall not exploit any right that the software
copyright owner has not expressly granted in the contract.
Article 19 In the case of an exclusive license
to exploit software copyright, the parties shall conclude a written contract.
In the absence of a written contract or an explicit
agreement upon exclusive license in the contract, the right that the licensee
is authorized to exploit shall be deemed as a non-exclusive right.
Article 20 In the case of a transfer of software
copyright, the parties shall conclude a written contract.
Article 21 Anyone that concludes an exclusive
licensing contract or a transfer contract of software copyright may register
with the software registration institution recognized by the copyright
administration department of the State Council.
Article 22 A Chinese citizen, legal entity or
other organization that authorizes a foreigner's exploiting software copyright,
or transfers it to a foreigner, shall comply with the Regulations of the
People's Republic of China on Administration of Technology Import and Export.
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Chapter
IV Legal Liability
Article 23 Except where otherwise provided in the
Copyright Law of the People's Republic of China or these Regulations, anyone
who commits any of the following acts of infringement shall, in light of the
circumstances, bear civil liability by means of ceasing infringements,
eliminating ill effects, making an apology, or compensating for losses:
(1) to publish or register a piece of software without
the authorization of the software copyright owner;
(2) to publish or register a piece of software developed
by another person as ones own;
(3) to publish, or register, a piece of joint software as
developed solely by oneself, without the authorization of the other
co-developer(s);
(4) to have ones name mentioned in connection with, or
alter the name on, a piece of software developed by another person;
(5) to alter or translate a piece of software without the
authorization of the software copyright owner; or
(6) to commit other acts of infringing upon software
copyright.
Article 24 Except where otherwise provided in the
Copyright Law of the People's Republic of China, these Regulations, or other
laws or administrative regulations, anyone who, without the authorization of
the software copyright owner, commits any of the following acts of infringement
shall, in light of the circumstances, bear civil liability by means of ceasing
infringements, eliminating ill effects, making an apology, or compensating for
losses; where such act also prejudices the public interest, the copyright
administration department may order to cease infringements, confiscate illegal
income, confiscate or destroy the infringing copies, and may impose a fine
concurrently; where the circumstances are serious, the copyright administration
department may confiscate the material, tools and equipment mainly used to
produce infringing copies; and where the act violates the Criminal Law,
criminal liability shall be investigated for the crime of infringing upon
copyright or selling infringing copies in accordance with the provisions of the
Criminal Law:
(1) to reproduce, wholly or in part, a piece of software
of the copyright owner;
(2) to distribute, rent or communicate to the public
through information network a piece of software of the copyright owner;
(3) to knowingly circumvent or sabotage technological
measures used by the copyright owner for protecting the software copyright;
(4) to knowingly remove or alter any electronic rights
management information attached to a copy of a piece of software; or
(5) to transfer, or authorize another person to exploit,
the software copyright of the owner.
Whoever commits the act referred to in item (1) or (2) of
the preceding paragraph may be concurrently fined 100 yuan for per copy or a
fine of not less than 1 time but not more than 5 times of the value of the
products; and, those who commits the act referred to in item (3), (4) or (5) of
the preceding paragraph may be fined not more than 200,000 yuan concurrently.
Article 25 The compensation paid for infringing upon
software copyright shall be determined in accordance with Article 48 of the
Copyright Law of the People's Republic of China.
Article 26 A software copyright owner that can
present evidence to prove that another person is committing, or is to commit,
an infringement which, if not being prevented promptly, is likely to cause
irreparable harm to him, may, before instituting legal proceedings, apply to a
people's court, in accordance with Article 49 of the Copyright Law of the
People's Republic of China, for an order of a stop to relevant act and for
measures of property preservation.
Article 27 In order to prevent infringement, a
software copyright owner may, before instituting legal proceedings, apply to a
people's court, in accordance with Article 50 of the Copyright Law of the
People's Republic of China, for evidence preservation where the evidence is
likely to be missing, or to be obtained difficultly later.
Article 28 A publisher or producer of copies of
a piece of software that fails to prove that the legal authorization for the
publication or production, or, a distributor or renter of copies of a piece of
software that fails to prove the legal source of the copies which he
distributes or rents, shall bear legal liability.
Article 29 The development of a piece of software
which is similar to a pre-existing one due to a limit of alternative forms of
expression does not constitute an infringement of the copyright in the
pre-existing one.
Article 30 A holder of copies of a piece of
software that neither knows nor has reasonable grounds to know that such copies
are infringing ones does not bear liability of compensation but shall cease the
use of, and destroy, the infringing copies. Nevertheless, if the cease of use
or the destruction of such copies is likely to cause heavy losses to him, the
holder of such copies may, after paying reasonable remuneration to the software
copyright owner, continue to use such copies.
Article 31 A dispute over software copyright
infringement may be settled by mediation.
A dispute over a software copyright contract may be
submitted to an arbitration institution for arbitration under an arbitration
clause in the copyright contract or under a written arbitration agreement
concluded later between the parties.
Any party may
institute legal proceedings directly in a people's court in the absence of an
arbitration clause in the contract or of a written arbitration agreement
concluded afterwards between the parties.
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Chapter
V Supplementary
Provisions
Article 32 Any act of infringing upon software
copyright committed prior to the entry into force of these Regulations shall be
dealt with under the relevant provisions of the State that are in force at the
time when the act was committed.
Article 33 These Regulations shall be effective as of
January 1, 2002. The Regulations on Computer Software Protection promulgated by
the State Council on June 4, 1991 shall be repealed simultaneously.
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