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What does copyright protect? Copyright? Trademark? or Patent? What is publication? When does a copyright attach? So why register? Copyright notice Duration What is a work for hire? What is a derivative work? I'm ready to register...take me to Virtual Copyright Fairy Godmother Return to top What does copyright protect? Copyright? Trademark? or Patent? What is publication? When does a copyright attach? So why register? Copyright notice Duration What is a work for hire? What is a derivative work? I'm ready to register...take me to Virtual Copyright Fairy Godmother ![]() Return to top What does copyright protect? Copyright? Trademark? or Patent? What is publication? When does a copyright attach? So why register? Copyright notice Duration What is a work for hire? What is a derivative work? I'm ready to register...take me to Virtual Copyright Fairy Godmother Return to top What does copyright protect? Copyright? Trademark? or Patent? What is publication? When does a copyright attach? So why register? Copyright notice Duration What is a work for hire? What is a derivative work? I'm ready to register...take me to Virtual Copyright Fairy Godmother |
![]() Copyright protects original works of authorship. This includes literary, dramatic, musical and other artistic works. Copyright DOES NOT extend to titles, names, or phrases, ideas, systems, processes and information. In other words, a work of authorship able to be fixed in a tangible medium is subject to copyright protection provided there is some element of creativity to the work to be protected. Copyright protection gives the owner of a copyright the right to reproduce a work, prepare derivative works based thereon, distribute the copyrighted work, perform any copyrighted work publicly, and display the copyrighted work publicly. COPYRIGHT? TRADEMARK? OR PATENT? WHAT IS PUBLICATION? The Copyright Act defines publication as the distribution of copies or phonorecords of a work to the public by sale or other transfer of ownership or by rental, lease or lending. The offering to distribute copies or phonorecords to a group of persons for purposes of further distribution, public performance, or public display constitutes publication. A public performance or display of a work does not of itself constitute publication. Who cares? Before the Copyright Act was amended in 1978, copyright was general secured by the act of publishing a work with notice of the copyright. Since the notice requirement is no longer mandatory, publication is no longer as significant in copyright law, but publication is still relevant in a few respects, such as effecting the deposit requirement for registration and effecting the date that copyright duration is calculated. I have included this information because you will see the publication concept referenced many times throughout this page. Since the law was changed in 1978, copyright protection exists from the time a work is fixed in a tangible form. Tangible form means a form that is directly perceptible or perceptible with the aid of a machine or devise. For instance, if you sing a song in the shower the song does not garner copyright protection at this time, because it is not being fixed in a tangible media, but if you sing it into a tape recorder it is fixed in a tangible media and so copyright protection would attach. SO WHY REGISTER? Although since 1978 copyright vests at the moment of fixation in a tangible medium, registration of your copyright with the United States Copyright Office is important for several reasons:
What are you waiting for? Go register! COPYRIGHT NOTICE (do I need to put that little "c" thing on my work?) For works published before March 1, 1989, the use of notice (i.e. © 1988 John Doe) was mandatory. If you published a work without notice it would revert to the public domain. Proper form of notice for visually perceptible copies. This requires The Symbol (©) or the word copyright or the abbreviation Copr; and the year of first publication of the work and the name of the owner of the copyright. What's that P in a circle? The P in a circle is the copyright notice for phonorecords of sounds recordings (i.e., the recording itself as opposed to the underlying composition). DURATION (how long does a copyright last?) This Works published before 1978 For works published before January 1, 1978, this question gets a little trickier. Generally speaking under previous law, a copyright was secured either on the date of publication or a work, or the date the work was registered in unpublished form. In both instances, the term of copyright was twenty eight years from the date the copyright was secured. Thereafter, the copyright could be extended for a second term of twenty eight years if a renewal was applied for within the last year of the first term. If not renewed, the copyright expired at the end of the first twenty-eight year term. Works renewed before 1978 Works that were originally copyrighted before 1950 and renewed before 1978 were granted an extension to their renewal term by an act of Congress (recently again extended). Thus, the renewal term now lasts for sixty-seven years (for a total of a ninety-five year copyright term.) Things get tricky for works that were in their first term when the law changed in 1978. Works copyrighted between January 1, 1950 and December 31, 1963 still had to be renewed in order to be protected for a second term. If renewed, the second term was extended to sixty-seven years, for a total of a ninety-five year term, see above.) If renewal was not applied for, the copyright protection ended on December 31 of the twenty eight year. Works copyrighted between January 1, 1964 and December 31, 1977 were automatically renewed for a second term. Thus, no registration of the renewal was required. Pre-1978 works that remain unpublished Works that were created but not published or registered before January 1, 1978 are automatically given copyright protection. The term of protection is calculated the same way as under the current law, i.e., life of the author plus seventy years (or the 95/120 year terms for works for hire, anonymous and pseudonymous works). However, in no case will a copyright in any pre-1978 unpublished work expire before December 31, 2002, and if the work is published before that date, the term will extend for another forty five years (through 2047). For more information on the extended copyright terms, please see the Copyright Office Circular New Terms for Copyright Protection. (do I own it or does that guy who paid me?) Generally This seems relatively simple, but things can get a little sticky when determining whether someone is an employee or not. The law of agency is used to determine whether someone is an employee. For more information on works for hire and determining whether a work is a work for hire, please refer to Copyright Office Circular 9. In addition, works that are not created by employees, but which are commissioned, can qualify as a work for hire. In such a case the commissioner receives the ownership interest in the work rather than the artist. The Copyright Act defines a commissioned work as a work for hire in situations when the work is "specially ordered or commissioned for use as a contribution to a collective work, as part of a motion picture or other audiovisual work, as a translation, as a supplementary work, as a compilation, as an instructional test, as a test, as an answer material for a test, or as an atlas." There must also be a written agreement signed by the parties that the work shall be a work for hire. Thus, only the foregoing types of commissioned works, when a written agreement exists, can be deemed works for hire. Other types of commissioned works cannot. (This type of situation frequently comes into play in the motion picture industry with writers, directors, etc. The producer becomes the owner of the copyright). WHAT IS A DERIVATIVE WORK? A It is extremely important to note that only the copyright owner of the underlying work, or one who has been granted permission to do so, may prepare derivative works. Unauthorized derivative works violate a copyright holder's exclusive rights under the copyright act. For more information on derivative works, please see Copyright Office Circular 14. HOW DO I REGISTER MY COPYRIGHT? It's simple...click your heels and follow me... If you would like additional basic copyright information, see Circular 1 from the U.S. Copyright Office Web Site. In addition, all of you lawgeeks (I'm one too) who would like to read the Copyright Act can do so here. Disclaimer! This page is for informational purposes only. I am not your lawyer! Don't try to sue me! If you have a legal question or problem, please retain counsel. If you do not know of a good lawyer, feel free to write me. I will try to direct you to an appropriate referral source in your area. Of course, if you want hire me as your lawyer, or if you have additional questions you can send me e-mail about that too... Feel free to post additional questions to the lawboard. return to top home | copyright registration help | mailing list trademark trouble | lawboard| music law forum weird flying dingbat blobs made using chankstore freefont tacklebox by chank diesel. write to chank directly to profess your love for him. |