51Թ

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first-sale doctrine

noun

  1. a legal principle allowing the purchaser of a lawfully made copy of a copyright-protected work to sell or give away that copy without permission but not to reproduce it.


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51Թ History and Origins

Origin of first-sale doctrine1

First recorded in 1920–25
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

Thanks to legal concepts like the first-sale doctrine, physical book buyers typically own the media they’ve purchased outright, and they’re allowed to sell it without the original publishers making money.

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The lending of physical books takes place under the legal principle of first-sale doctrine, which limits the rights of content creators to control how their works are resold, said Mehtab Khan, a resident fellow at the Yale Law School’s Information Society Project.

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Quite a lot about copyright law, the First Amendment and first-sale doctrine, but at the end of the day it reinforced what we already knew: Get off other people’s platforms.

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The problem for ReDigi is in applying what’s called the first-sale doctrine.

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Redbox argued that it was protected by the "first-sale doctrine," a part of copyright law that says someone who buys a copyrighted work is allowed to resell it or give it away, as long as they don't make their own copies to sell.

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