Page:Australian Copyright Act 1968 (63 of 1968).pdf/19

 No. 63 Division 2.—Infringement of Copyright in Works.

36.—(1.) Subject to this Act, the copyright in a literary, dramatic, musical or artistic work is infringed by a person who, not being the owner of the copyright, and without the licence of the owner of the copyright, does in Australia, or authorizes the doing in Australia of, any act comprised in the copyright.

(2.) The next three succeeding sections do not affect the generality of the last preceding sub-section.

37. The copyright in a literary, dramatic, musical or artistic work is infringed by a person who, without the licence of the owner of the copyright, imports an article into Australia for the purpose of—
 * (a) selling, letting for hire, or by way of trade offering or exposing for sale or hire, the article;
 * (b) distributing the article—
 * (i) for the purpose of trade; or
 * (ii) for any other purpose to an extent that will affect prejudicially the owner of the copyright; or
 * (c) by way of trade exhibiting the article in public,

where, to his knowledge, the making of the article would, if the article had been made in Australia by the importer, have constituted an infringement of the copyright.

38.—(1.) The copyright in a literary, dramatic, musical or artistic work is infringed by a person who, in Australia, and without the licence of the owner of the copyright―
 * (a) sells, lets for hire, or by way of trade offers or exposes for sale or hire, an article; or
 * (b) by way of trade exhibits an article in public,

where, to his knowledge, the making of the article constituted an infringement of the copyright or, in the case of an imported article, would, if the article had been made in Australia by the importer, have constituted such an infringement.

(2.) For the purposes of the last preceding sub-section, the distribution of any articles―
 * (a) for the purpose of trade; or
 * (b) for any other purpose to an extent that affects prejudicially the owner of the copyright concerned,

shall be taken to be the sale of those articles.

39.―(1.) The copyright in a literary, dramatic or musical work is infringed by a person who permits a place of public entertainment to be used for the performance in public of the work, where the performance constitutes an infringement of the copyright in the work.