Copyright includes the following personal and property rights:

(1) Right of publication, i.e. the right to decide whether a work should be made public.

(2) Right of authorship, i.e. the right to indicate the author’s identity and to sign the work.

(3) Right of modification, i.e. the right to modify or authorize others to modify the work.

(4) Right to protect the integrity of the work, i.e. the right to protect the work from distortion or tampering.

(5) Right of reproduction, i.e. the right to make one or more copies of the work by printing, photocopying, rubbing, recording, videotaping, dubbing, or reshooting.

(6) Right of distribution, i.e. the right to provide the original or copies of the work to the public by sale or donation.

(7) Right of rental, i.e. the right to license others to temporarily use cinematographic works, works created by methods similar to filming, and computer software for a fee, unless the computer software is not the main subject of the rental.

(8) Right of exhibition, i.e. the right to publicly display originals or copies of works of art or photography.

(9) Performance right, i.e. the right to publicly perform a work and to publicly broadcast the performance of a work by various means.

(10) Screening right, i.e. the right to publicly reproduce works of fine art, photography, film and works created by methods similar to filming through technical equipment such as projectors and slide projectors.

(11) Broadcasting right, i.e. the right to publicly broadcast or disseminate a work by wireless means, to disseminate a broadcast work to the public by wired dissemination or retransmission, and to disseminate a broadcast work to the public by loudspeakers or other similar tools for transmitting symbols, sounds and images.

(12) Information network dissemination right, i.e. the right to provide a work to the public by wired or wireless means so that the public can obtain the work at a time and place of their own choice.

(13) Filming right, i.e. the right to fix a work on a carrier by filming a film or by methods similar to filming a film.

(14) Adaptation right, i.e. the right to change a work and create a new original work.

(15) The right of translation, which is the right to convert a work from one language into another.

(16) The right of compilation, which is the right to compile works or fragments of works into new works through selection or arrangement. (17) Other rights that should be enjoyed by the copyright owner.

Copyright is to protect the form of expression of ideas, not the ideas themselves, because while protecting the interests of exclusive private property rights such as copyright, it is also necessary to take into account the accumulation of human civilization and the dissemination of knowledge and information. Therefore, algorithms, mathematical methods, technologies or machine designs are not the objects that copyright is intended to protect.