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http://www.theatlantic.com/national...d-you-may-have-violated-copyright-law/258276/
Chances are none of your phones, TVs or PCs were manufactured in the States which means you have no right to resell them I'm afraid. This ruling has already been used to persecute a man named Supap Kirtsaeng who was making money by importing textbooks from abroad (where they are a hell of a lot cheaper) and selling them on to other students to make himself money and save the other students some.
The Supreme Court case concerns something called the "first-sale doctrine" in copyright law. Simply put, the doctrine means that you can buy and sell the stuff you purchase. Even if someone has copyright over some piece of your stuff, you can sell it without permission from the copyright holder because the copyright holder can only control the "first-sale." The Supreme Court has recognized this doctrine since 1908.
[...]
In 1998, the Supreme Court ruled that the first-sale doctrine applies to any product manufactured in the United States, sold in the U.S., even if the first sale by the copyright holder was abroad and the item was imported back into the U.S. This decision was unanimous and rejected the interpretation preferred by the U.S. government's lawyer -- and the biggest copyright holders.
Chances are none of your phones, TVs or PCs were manufactured in the States which means you have no right to resell them I'm afraid. This ruling has already been used to persecute a man named Supap Kirtsaeng who was making money by importing textbooks from abroad (where they are a hell of a lot cheaper) and selling them on to other students to make himself money and save the other students some.