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Tanzanian intellectual property law and copyright issues

Tanzanian intellectual property law and copyright issues

Tanzanian intellectual property law and copyright issues, copyright law in Tanzania, Tanzania copyright, Tanzania intellectual property law

We will address the principle of copyright, copyright duration, authors, and the legislation that controls copyright concerns in mainland Tanzania in this article.

Legislation

The Copyright and Neighbouring Rights Act* governs copyright and associated issues in mainland Tanzania (the Act). The following are the main subjects covered by the Act:

Performances are protected under the Act if they are made by a Tanzanian national or if they take place in Tanzania. Performances that are fixed in a phonogram, audio-visual form, or embodied in a broadcast are likewise protected under the Act.

Unpublished works and works first published in a foreign country by foreign creators who are residents of that foreign country are protected under the Act. This protection, however, is predicated on the other country providing equivalent protection to Tanzanian nationals and residents for unpublished works or works originally published in Tanzania. Foreign folklore expressions are likewise covered by the Act, with reciprocal protection.

International conventions govern matters such as folklore expressions, performances, phonograms, and broadcasts, and the Act. Tanzania, on the other hand, must be a party to such conventions in order for them to apply under the Act. Tanzania, for example, is a signatory to the Berne Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic Works, which was established in 1886. (the Berne Convention). On July 25, 1994, the Berne Convention went into effect in Tanzania.

Authors and Copyright

Copyright is defined as the exclusive legal right to print, publish, perform, film, or record a literary, artistic, or musical work, according to the Act. Under the Act, an author is simply defined as a natural person who creates the work. The Act protects authors of unique literary and creative works only because they are creators of such works. Among the literary and artistic works mentioned are:

Authors’ economic and moral rights

Authors of works protected by copyright are granted economic and moral rights to their creations.
Except if the work is integrated by means of photography, sound or visual recording, broadcasting, or cable distribution, an author is allowed to claim authorship and indication of his or her work for moral rights. An author has the right to object to and seek remedy from the distribution, mutilation, adaptation, or any other unfavorable action taken against his or her work if it would jeopardize his or her honor and reputation.

Authors, on the other hand, have the following economic rights:

Copyright duration

The rights of authors are generally protected during the author’s lifetime and for 50 years after his or her death. The Act further specifies the length of time for which the author’s rights are protected on a case-by-case basis, as shown below:

The list of Tanzanian IP Firm can be found here.

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