Copyright, also known as author's right, refers to the rights that authors of literary, artistic, and scientific works have over their creations.
Copyright includes two parts: economic rights and moral rights. Economic rights refer to the rights to use and receive remuneration for the work, such as reproducing, distributing, renting, exhibiting, projecting, broadcasting, communicating via information networks, producing cinematographic works, adapting, translating, and compiling the work, and receiving remuneration for these uses. Moral rights, also known as personal rights, include the right of publication, the right of authorship, the right to make modifications, and the right to protect the integrity of the work.