Is buying a pirated book infringing the copyright?
If you buy a pirated book and read it yourself, you can also Say it's not illegal. Because pirated books involve copyright issues, my country's Copyright Law stipulates a wide range of rights for copyright owners, including 4 personal rights, namely the right to publish, the right to sign, the right to modify, and the right to protect the integrity of the work; 12 kinds of property rights, namely the right to reproduce, Distribution rights, rental rights, performance rights, information network dissemination rights, etc. To determine whether a behavior is an infringement, we need to see whether the behavior falls within the scope of copyright control. Buying and reading pirated books does not infringe any of the above copyright rights and does not constitute infringement. However, selling pirated books infringes upon the copyright owner's distribution rights, and producing pirated books infringes upon the copyright owner's reproduction rights. Some scholars have summarized the above issues and explained them in three types of behaviors, namely contact, enjoyment and use; purchasing is an act of contact, reading is an act of enjoyment, and copying and distribution are acts of use. Copyright law only regulates the use of works. Access and enjoyment are not controlled by copyright. Other laws do not regulate this behavior, so it is not illegal to buy pirated books to read.
The above content is the relevant answer. Under normal circumstances, if we just buy pirated copies, it will constitute infringement. If we buy pirated copies and read them ourselves, it will not constitute infringement. It is illegal, because the circumstances of this case are very minor, and basically no one wants to prosecute consumers who buy pirated copies. If you have other legal questions, you can consult the relevant lawyers on the Legal Savior Network.
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