<BLOCKQUOTE><font size="1" face="Verdana, Arial">quote:</font><HR>Originally posted by lyn39:
Are Chinese characters copyrighted? My acupuncturist and I are creating a journal for practictioners and patients and would like to include the characters as well as the translations for some of the acupuncture points. Many thanks. Lyn<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>
My response:
Pictograms, or Chinese Characters, and Arabic letters used by the Western World, are not, in and of themselves, copyrighted or copyrightable. Pictograms are characters, or representations, in picture form, that when placed singly, or together, represent various ideas or things. If you think about it, if such characters were, in fact, copyrightable, then how would the world commununicate? What I'm saying to you here may, in fact, be copyrightable. But, the letters that make up these sentences are not.
Another example would be the letters that make up "Coca-Cola" - which is not only a Trademark, but is a Copyright of the company of the same name. It's not the letters; it's the "grouping" of those letters that make something a Trademark or a Copyright.
IAAL
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[This message has been edited by I AM ALWAYS LIABLE (edited October 03, 2000).]