According to Articles 39 to 44 of the Copyright Act of the Republic of Korea, under the jurisdiction of the Government of the Republic of Korea all copyrighted works enter the public domain 70 years after the death of the creator (there being multiple creators, the creator who dies last) or 70 years after publication when made public in the name of an organization. (30 years for death before 1957, 50 years before July 2013)
This applies to copyrighted works of which authors died before 1 January 1963, or made public in the name of an organization before 1 January 1963.
Furthermore, with the exceptions of photographs reproducing otherwise copyrighted works of art, and photographs inserted into a work of study or art and produced only for the purpose of inclusion within said work, photographs or other works of a similar form to photography either published or produced in negative on or before 31 December 1976 are now in the public domain in the Republic of Korea as their term of copyright has expired there.
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This work may not be in the public domainin the United States because its U.S. copyright was restored by the URAA as it was still copyrighted in its source country (Korea Selatan) on the URAA date (1 Januari 1996). In most cases, it is copyrighted in the U.S. until 95 years after the year in which it was initially published (exceptions are works published after 1977; see Commons:Hirtle chart).This template may not be used for files uploaded after 1 March 2012.
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{{Information |Description={{en|Movie poster for 1956 Korean movie ''Touch-Me-Not'' (봉선화 - Bongseonhwa).}} |Source= movie poster by Kim Ki-Yeong Production * (Downloaded from: http://www.koreafilm.or.kr/cinema/program/movie.asp?g_seq=52&p_seq=301&se