From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
|
According to the Article 4 of the Law of Georgia on Copyright and Related rights this work is in the public domain within Georgia (country) and possibly in other jurisdictions because it is one of the following:
- (a) daily news or details of current events that constitute regular press information;
- (b) works of folk art (folklore);
- (c) official documents of a political, legislative or administrative nature (laws, decrees, resolutions, court awards, State standards, etc.) issued by government authorities within their powers, and official translations thereof;
- (d) State symbols of Georgia, government awards; symbols and signs of government authorities, the Armed Forces of Georgia and other military formations; symbols of territorial communities; symbols and signs of enterprises, institutions and organizations;
- (e) bank notes;
- (f) transport schedules, TV and radio broadcast schedules, telephone directories and other similar databases that do not meet the originality criteria and to which the sui generis right (a particular or special right) is applicable.
Note that drafts of anything that falls under sections (d) and (e), unless officially approved are under copyright. |
|
Source: [1]
[edit] Description
Georgian protesters in Tbilisi 1990
File history
Legend: (cur) = this is the current file, (del) = delete
this old version, (rev) = revert to this old version.
Click on date to download the file or see the image uploaded on that date.
File links
The following pages on the English Wikipedia link to this file (pages on other projects are not listed):