How to Copyright Your Work
Protect Your Intellectual Property Rights
By Grayson Eames, published Jun 29, 2006
Published Content: 9 Total Views: 1,802 Favorited By: 0 CPs
What most people don’t understand is that you don’t have to register your work with the federal government in order to protect your words from being appropriated by a third party. Simply placing a notice at the end of your work, stating that you hold the copyright, is sufficient to grant you the intellectual property rights.
this eventuality by copyrighting your work as soon as it is finished.
Copyrights can be confusing until you understand how they work. Essentially, any work – no matter what the substance – is protected under International copyright law the minute it has been recorded in “fixed form”. And this doesn’t just apply to published material; as soon as you’ve written it down, it’s yours. This is the somewhat fine line that separates a “creation” from an “idea”.
If you’re nervous about your work and fear its theft, you can always guarantee even more protection by registering your work with the copyright administration. It costs $30.00 to officially copyright your book, article, manual or website, and once you’ve copyrighted your work, it is good for at least seventy years after your death.
When you’ve registered your work, you have more legal recourse should your creation be stolen. You can report the copyright infringement to the copyright office and sue in civil court for the damages incurred. Copyright is taken very seriously in the United States, and you should go to whatever necessary lengths to protect yourself.
If, however, you decide not to register your work, a simple notice at the end of the document will suffice. Although it isn’t required, this further signifies that your work is your own, and that you are the owner of the rights to the work.
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Takeaways
- Registering your copyright with the copyright office is not a requirement to protect your work.
- Copyrighting fees will go up from $30 to $45 beginning July 1, 2006.
- Most copyright registrations require Form SR.
Did You Know?
A "poor man's copyright" refers to someone who mails their own work to themselves in order to establish their ownership. There is actually no clause in copyright law that addresses this practice.
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