Publication is a
technical term in legal contexts and especially important in
copyright legislation. An author of a work generally is the initial owner of the
copyright on the work. One of the copyrights granted to the author of a work is the exclusive right to publish the work.
any reading, broadcasting, exhibition of works using any means, either electronically or nonelectronically, or performing in any way so that works can be read, heard, or seen by others.
—Article 1, Law of the Republic of Indonesia Number 28 of 2014[3]
the distribution of copies or phonorecords of a work to the public by sale or other transfer of ownership, or by rental, lease, or lending. The offering to distribute copies or phonorecords to a group of people for purposes of further distribution, public performance, or public display, constitutes publication. A public performance or display of a work does not of itself constitute publication.
To perform or display a work "publicly" means –
(1) to perform or display it at a place open to the public or at any place where a substantial number of people outside a normal circle of a family and its social acquaintances is gathered; or
(2) to transmit or otherwise communicate a performance or display of the work to a place specified by clause (1) or to the public, by means of any device or process, whether the members of the public capable of receiving the performance or display receive it in the same place or in separate places and at the same time or at different times.
When the work is reproduced in multiple copies, such as in reproductions of a painting or castings of a statue, the work is published when the reproductions are publicly distributed or offered to a group for further distribution or public display.
Generally, the right to publish a work is an exclusive right of copyright owner (
17 USC 106), and violating this right (e.g. by disseminating copies of the work without the copyright owner's consent) is a
copyright infringement (
17 USC 501(a)), and the copyright owner can demand (by suing in court) that e.g. copies distributed against their will be confiscated and destroyed (
17 USC 502, 17 USC 503). Exceptions and limitations are written into copyright law, however; for example, the exclusive rights of the copyright owner eventually expire, and even when in force, they do not extend to publications covered by
fair use or certain types of uses by libraries and educational institutions.
The definition of "publication" as "distribution of copies to the general public with the consent of the author" is also supported by the
Berne Convention, which makes mention of "copies" in article 3(3), where "published works" are defined.[1] In the Universal Copyright Convention, "publication" is defined in article VI as "the reproduction in tangible form and the general distribution to the public of copies of a work from which it can be read or otherwise visually perceived."[2] Many countries around the world follow this definition, although some make some exceptions for particular kinds of works. In Germany, §6 of the Urheberrechtsgesetz additionally considers works of the visual arts (such as sculptures) "published" if they have been made permanently accessible by the general public (i.e., erecting a sculpture on public grounds is publication in Germany).[5] Australia and the UK (as the U.S.) do not have this exception and generally require the distribution of copies necessary for publication. In the case of sculptures, the copies must be even three-dimensional.[6][7]
Biological classification
In
biological classification (
taxonomy), the publication of the description of a
taxon has to comply with some rules. The definition of the "publication" is defined in
nomenclature codes. Traditionally there were the following rules:
The publication must be generally available.
The date of publication is the date the published material became generally available.
Electronic publication with some restrictions is permitted for publication of scientific names of fungi since 1 January 2013.[8]
Types
Material types
There are many material types of publication, some of which are:
Booklet: a leaflet of more than one sheet of paper, usually attached in the style of a book
Broadside: a large single sheet of paper printed on one side, designed to be plastered onto walls, produced from the 16th to 19th centuries, obsolete with the development of newspapers and cheap novels
Flyer or handbill: a small sheet of paper printed on one side, designed to be handed out free
Leaflet: a single sheet of paper printed on both sides and folded
Types of publication can also be distinguished by content, for example:
Brochure: an informative document made for advertising products or services, usually in the form of a pamphlet or leaflet
Bulletin: information written in short on a flyer or inside another publication for public viewing, or a brief message or announcement broadcast to a wide audience by way of television, radio, or internet
Magazine: a periodical publication, generally published on a regular schedule (often weekly or monthly), containing a variety of content
Monograph: a long research publication written by one person
Newsletter: a bulletin, leaflet, pamphlet, or newspaper distributed to a specific audience
Newspaper: a periodical publication of several pages printed with news, sports, information, and advertising, and which may be published and distributed daily, weekly, monthly, quarterly, or annually
Tract: a religious or political argument written by one person and designed to be distributed free, usually in the form of a booklet or pamphlet, but sometimes longer
ISO 690, a set of guidelines for bibliographic references and citations to information resources, defines a publication as a "message or document offered for general distribution or sale and usually produced in multiple copies", and lists types of publications including monographs and their components and
serials and their components.[9] Common
bibliographic softwarespecifications such as
BibTeX and
Citation Style Language also list types of publications,[10][11] as do various standards for
library cataloging.[12] For example,
RDA, a cataloging standard adopted by the
Library of Congress in 2013 and by some other national libraries, differentiates between content types, media types, and carrier types of information resources.[13]
A work that has not undergone publication, and thus is not generally available to the public, or for
citation in scholarly or legal contexts, is called an unpublished work. In some cases unpublished works are widely cited, or circulated via informal means.[14] An
author who has not yet published a work may also be referred to as being unpublished.