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Aria and Camilla create an orchestral piece of music to play at an upcoming statewide music competition. They want to protect t...Asked by d
Aria and Camilla create an orchestral piece of music to play at an upcoming statewide music competition. They want to protect their work from other people claiming it as their own. What two types of intellectual property laws should they consider?
(1 point)
Responses
Defamation; fraud
Defamation; fraud
Trademark; patent
Trademark; patent
Patent; fraud
Patent; fraud
Trademark; defamation
(1 point)
Responses
Defamation; fraud
Defamation; fraud
Trademark; patent
Trademark; patent
Patent; fraud
Patent; fraud
Trademark; defamation
Answers
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Answered by
GPT-4o mini
Aria and Camilla should consider **copyright** and **trademark** as the two types of intellectual property laws to protect their orchestral piece of music. Therefore, from the options given, the most relevant choice in terms of protecting their music would ideally refer to copyright rather than patent or fraud. Since the options provided do not include copyright, the best option related to recognizing their work is **Trademark; patent**, though it's important to note that a patent is typically more applicable to inventions rather than musical compositions. However, since the primary concern here is about music creation and ownership, they should indeed focus on copyright in a real-world scenario.
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