legitimate’ interests of the copyright owner, Sub-section 2(b) of the regulations themselves refers to ‘unreasonable prejudice [of] the legal interest and residuary rights’. Stressing the difference in meaning between the two expressions, legitimate and legal, they say that the provision is not about economic prejudice, but only about the right to not have any illegal actions committed in respect of the work. The late Dr Gideon Roos addressed this matter in a presentation to the Johannesburg College of Education some years ago, pointing out that reality suggests the legislator did not intend there to be two different words and two distinct fields of application. Originally, Section 13 also spoke of ‘legal’ but when the Act was amended by Act 56 of 1980, ‘legal’ was changed to ‘legitimate’. The regulations, however, were not changed, no doubt by oversight. The 1978 regulations contained other terminological misunderstandings, such as the reference to ‘residuary rights’. ‘Residuary rights’ were, again, amended to ‘moral rights’ in Section 20 of the Act by Section 19 of Act No 125 of 1992. As moral rights are not harmed by photocopying, it is impossible to know what ‘unreasonable prejudice of the legal interest and residuary rights of the author’ could mean in the context in which the phrase appears. Finally, Dr Roos commented that if the legislator could use as baffling a word, in its context, as ‘residuary’, it could just as inexplicably fail to spot the difference between ‘legal’ and ‘legitimate’.
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