
Issues for Literary Translators
Jeffrey S. Ankrom
Attorney at Law, LLC
CopyrightTimes.com
Street address:
701 North Walnut Street
Bloomington, IN
47404-3848
USA
Mailing address:
Jeffrey S. Ankrom
P.O. Box 672
Bloomington, IN 47402-0672
USA
Tel. (812) 334-9010
Toll free 1-888-334-9050
Fax 1-888-254-0062
Ankrom@CopyrightTimes.com
This website is intended to provide information, not legal advice. If you need guidance with specific legal issues, consult an attorney who has been admitted to practice in the relevant jurisdiction and who is well informed in the relevant areas of law. Consulting this website does not create an attorney-client relationship. The site owner assumes no legal liability whatsoever for any errors or omissions on this website or for damages of any sort resulting from reliance on information provided here. Again, if you need legal help, consult an attorney.
Jeffrey S. Ankrom (J.D., Indiana University School of Law, Bloomington, 2004) has been admitted to the practice of law in Indiana, including the United States District Court of the Southern District of Indiana and the United States District Court of the Northern District of Indiana. He is in the general practice of law, with an interest in copyright, internet, and publishing law. His other research interests include the intellectual-property issues facing translators, and the social and legal aspects of biotechnology. He is not a patent attorney.
© 2004-2006 Jeffrey S. Ankrom.
Some elements of this site are in the public domain. Just ask.
Acknowledgments and Trackbacks
This website was designed by Susan Ewick, a true scholar and a great-hearted web guru. She developed the cyber-architecture for the site and transformed it from something that looked like a 1962 television test pattern into something functional and elegant. She even took the photograph used in the masthead (which she also designed). Anyone who saw the earlier version of this site will share in my gratitude.
The CSS for this website was developed from templates at Solucija--a very generous resource for the novice web designer.
The font in the logo graphic is Chopin Script, downloaded from dafont.com. Thanks to both dafont.com and the designer of this font. (If someone could point me toward the designer's website, I would gladly provide a link here.)
The Favicon was generated by FavIcon from Pics.
The illegible image of the intellectual-property clause is my own preliminary Photoshop job using a scan of the Constitution available from the National Archives. Thanks to my fellow taxpayers and to the public servants who saw the value in showing the people their own documents. The scan from the National Archives is in the public domain. Note that in the original, there are several lines of text between "The Congress shall have Power" and "To Promote...." (Those intervening lines enumerate other powers of Congress.) My cut-and-paste job is simply to show the wording of the most important statement of U.S. intellectual-property law. Eventually, I will post a more legible Photoshop version. Meanwhile, spend some time with the whole Constitution.
Photoshop is a registered trademark of Adobe Systems, Inc.