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United Kingdom Copyright LawIPR Intellectual Property Rights, Domain Name Disputes, In 1518 the first copyright privilege in England was issued to Richard Pynson, the
successor to William Caxton. The privilege gives a monopoly for the term of two years. The practice was continued until the Statute of Monopolies was enacted in 1623, ending most monopolies, with certain exceptions, such as patents. Grants of Letters patent to publishers became common after 1623. The period of common-law copyright for Great Britain was brought to a close by the Act of Queen Anne in 1709. According to British law an individual's work is placed under copyright law as soon as it leaves that person's mind and is placed in some physical form. It can be a painting, a musical work written in manuscript or an architectural schematic. Once in physical form, as long as it is an original work (in the sense of not
having been copied from an existing work, rather than in the sense of being novel or
unique), copyright in that work is automatically vested in (i.e. owned by) the person who
put the concept into material form. Once this is done the package is mailed to the owner by recorded delivery, which helps to establish when the work was created, who the originator of the work is and that there are signatory validators prepared to state that it is original. Once this process is complete the package and contents may be able to be usable in a court of law as evidence of date of creation and also for priority when necessary.
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