(3) Works in which copyright subsists are: 1) written works in the fields of fiction, non-fiction, politics, education, etc.; 2) scientific works or works of popular science, either written or three-dimensional (monographs, articles, reports on scientific research, plans, schemes, models, tests, etc.); 3) computer programs that shall be protected as literary works. Protection applies to the expression in any form of a computer program; 4) speeches, lectures, addresses, sermons and other works which consist of words and which are expressed orally (oral works); 5) scripts and script outlines, librettos; 6) dramatic and dramatico-musical works; 7) musical compositions with or without words; 8) choreographic works and entertainments in dumb show; 9) audiovisual works (§ 33); 10) [repealed – RT I 1999, 97, 859 – entry into force 06.01.2000] 11) works of painting, graphic arts, typography, drawings, illustrations; 12) productions and works of set design; 13) works of sculpture; 14) architectural graphics (drawings, drafts, schemes, figures, plans, projects, etc.), letters of explanation explaining the contents of a project, additional texts and programs, architectural works of plastic art (models, etc.), works of architecture and landscape architecture (buildings, constructions, parks, green areas, etc.), urban developmental ensembles and complexes; 15) works of applied art; 16) works of design and fashion design; 17) photographic works and works expressed by a process analogous to photography, slides and slide films; 18) cartographic works (topographic, geographic, geological, etc. maps, atlases, models); 19) draft legislation; 191) standards and draft standards; 20) opinions, reviews, expert opinions, etc.; 21) derivative works, i.e. translations, adaptations of original works, modifications (arrangements) and other alterations of works; 22) collections of works and information (including databases). For the purposes of this Act, ‘database’ means a collection of indepen