Reading comp PrepTest 130 · Section 2 · Question 17

Passage

Questions 14-20  .        Proponents of the tangible–object theory of  . copyright argue that copyright and similar intellectual–  . property Remaining source text redacted.
Passage walkthrough
Passage Summary

Topic: Legal


Paragraph 1

  • Paragraph note
    • Tangible-object theory of copyright explained (own physical object; owner can do anything with object)
  • Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
    • Tangible-object theory proponents' views:
      • Copyright/IP rights extensions of rights to concrete, physical objects (first sentence)
      • They assume that all copyrightable things can be given physical form and that ownership gives the owner rights to do what they please with the object (second and third sentences)
    • Examples of physical form copyrightable objects can take, according to tangible-object theory proponents:
      • Manuscript, videotape (second sentence)
    • Examples of rights that ownership grants, according to tangible-object theory proponents:
      • Hiding or displaying, copying, destroying, transferring (fourth and last sentences)
    • Author's attitude: "depends on" (second sentence); "also accepts" (third sentence); "may essentially do whatever he or she pleases" (third sentence)

Paragraph 2

  • Paragraph note
    • Retained rights explained (owner can keep rights after transferring, like the right to copy or adapt)
  • Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
    • Definition of "retained rights": The rights kept by the original owner after transferring the object (second sentence)
    • Example of another area of law that uses retained rights:
      • Property law, where the original owner may retain easements and building restrictions (third sentence)
    • Examples of retained rights in copyright law:
      • Original copyrighter may retain rights to copy, use, or produce similar things, like the public performance of a musical score (last sentence)

Paragraph 3

  • Paragraph note
    • Tangible-object theory's proponents (justifies IP rights without showing that you can own ideas) and author's rebuttal (can copyright things that aren't physical; ideas more important; poet example)
  • Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
    • Tangible-object theory proponents' views:
      • The chief advantage of the tangible-object theory is that it can show how one can acquire intellectual property rights, but without having to base those rights on the belief that one can own ideas (first sentence)
    • Author's view:
      • Tangible-object theory can't account for the fact that some copyrightable things don't have a physical form and, more importantly, that the creation of the ideas is more valuable than the creation of the object (second and third sentences)
    • Example of a copyrightable thing that doesn't have a physical form, according to the author:
      • Sports broadcast (second sentence)
    • Example of an instance where the creation of the ideas is more valuable than the creation of the object, according to the author:
      • A poet dictating a poem to a friend who writes it — under tangible-object theory, the friend would own the poem (fourth and last sentences)
    • Author's attitude: "widely accepted but problematic" (first sentence); "seems plausible" (second sentence); "cannot accommodate the standard assumption" (second sentence); "More importantly" (third sentence); "does not acknowledge that in many cases the work of conceiving ideas is more crucial and more valuable" (third sentence); "seem to be no ground" (last sentence)

Main Point: Tangible-object theory may seem plausible, but it's an incorrect approach to intellectual property because it can't account for all copyrightable materials and puts more importance on protecting objects than ideas.

Meta-Structure?

Criticizing a Viewpoint: This passage most closely fits the Criticizing a Viewpoint Meta-Structure.* In such a passage, the author describes a view held by another person or group and then criticizes their view. Importantly, the author's argument should focus primarily on why the view is wrong, unjustified, or misguided. That fits this passage well, where the author criticizes tangible-object theory — particularly the fact that it overlooks certain copyrightable works (like sports broadcasts) and rests on the misguided assumption that the creation of a physical object is more important than the creation of the original idea.

In a Criticizing a Viewpoint passage, the main point is typically a summary of the author's criticisms. We can find those criticisms in the third paragraph, so our main point summarized the author's two main issues with tangible-object theory.

*As is often the case with passages that fall into the Critical Meta-Structure family, this passage could be described by at least one other Meta-Structure from this family. You could certainly call this a Correcting the Record passage. And if we take tangible-object theory as a debate between two different justifications of copyright law (one that says that you cannot own ideas, and one that says you can), we could even call this a Resolving a Debate passage.

Examples: Examples are the most prominent minor Meta-Structure in this passage. Examples litter this passage. The author almost can't help themselves, illustrating every point they make with an example. We'll almost certainly get a question about one or more of these examples — perhaps even a Role of Detail question about what general point one of these examples illustrates — so we should have the examples highlighted or underlined and have the general point they illustrate summarized in our notes.

Last Thoughts?

Note the way that the last example is phrased — "Suppose that…" This type of hypothetical tends to be asked about, with the answer referring to it as a hypothetical or a thought experiment, so let's keep that in mind.

Question prompt

Suppose an inventor describes Remaining source text redacted.
Why the credited answer is right

Credited answer: A

The notes below walk through why it fits the stem and how to eliminate the rest.

Question Type

Legal

Strategy Overview

Review the main point and any relevant parts of the passage and notes, if necessary, to anticipate what might happen in the scenario described

Answer Anticipation

For questions that ask us to infer, from a few details in the passage, what must be true in a novel situation, we can start by quickly finding and reviewing those details. Once we review that part of the passage, we can anticipate what might happen in the hypothetical situation described. We should consider how the hypothetical situation applies to what we reviewed and whether it might follow a similar or distinct pattern to that described in the passage.In this case, we're asked what tangible-object theory would say about a situation where an inventor describes an idea to an engineer who then draws out specs and makes the invention. Fortunately, our note for the third paragraph reminds us that the author described an analogous situation in the passage. This situation resembles the "poet example" from the end of that paragraph — a poet who dictates a poem to a friend who then writes it out (P3, S4-S5). In both cases, one person came up with the idea, while the other person created a tangible version of it.In the case of the poem, the author says that tangible-object theory leads to the conclusion that the friend who wrote the poem has the copyright in it since they created the tangible object (P3, S5). That means the author would agree that, in the analogous case, the engineer who took the idea and produced the prototype would own the object, according to the tangible-object theory. Let's find an answer reflecting that.

Answer choices

  1. A
    Only the engineer is Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice A matches the stem

    (A) Does this say the engineer who took the idea and produced the prototype would own the object, according to the tangible-object theory?

    Yes! The author criticizes the tangible-object theory for suggesting that a friend writing down a poem dictated to them by a poet would own the object/copyright (P3, S4-S5). That implies that tangible-object theory would conclude the engineer who constructed the prototype is the one who owns the IP in that invention, not the inventor. This answer is, therefore, correct. Since it matches our anticipation, we can select it and immediately advance to the following question.

  2. B
    Only the inventor is Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice B is not credited

    (B) Does this say the engineer who took the idea and produced the prototype would own the object, according to the tangible-object theory?

    No, so we can cross off (B). Although the author implies the poet/inventor should have IP protections for their ideas, the author says that tangible-object theory holds that the transcriber/engineer will actually claim the creation as their IP (P3, S5).

  3. C
    The inventor and the Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice C is not credited

    (C) Does this say the engineer who took the idea and produced the prototype would own the object, according to the tangible-object theory?

    Nope. So let's cross off (C). After all, no one argues that the ideator and the person who fixes that idea in a tangible form should both get credit, let alone equal claim to credit.

  4. D
    The engineer is entitled Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice D is not credited

    (D) Does this say the engineer who took the idea and produced the prototype would own the object, according to the tangible-object theory?

    Not quite. The passage says that proponents of the tangible-object theory believe the creator of a tangible object owns the IP in it (P3, S5) and that that ownership implies certain rights, including "the right to copy the object for profit" (P2, S4). As such, tangible-object theory proponents would argue the engineer has the IP rights in the object and the right to copy it for profit.

  5. E
    The inventor is entitled Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice E is not credited

    (E) Does this say the engineer who took the idea and produced the prototype would own the object, according to the tangible-object theory?

    Again, no. This answer is wrong for the exact same reason as (D). The tangible-object theory proponents believe that the right to copy an owned item for profit rests with the owner (P2, S4), so the split in these answers is incorrect. They also believe that the engineer would own the IP in the invention (P3, S5), according to the author.

What this tests

Question analytics

Based on historical answer selection rates for this question.

Answer choice distribution

  1. A Credited 72%
  2. B 10%
  3. C 5%
  4. D 7%
  5. E 6%

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