Copyright protection
attaches as soon as you fix the song in a "tangible medium."
Though many folks are
still under the misapprehension that you have to register your work with
Copyright Office to "copyright" it, that
hasn't been true for decades. Generally speaking, if you scribble something on
a sheet of paper and then someone comes around and copies it, they've violated
your copyright in the scribble.
On the other hand, if
you're just riffing in your bedroom and someone comes by, listens in through
your window, and then copies your song, you're probably not going to win on
your copyright claim. If you riffed and then recorded it, wrote down the music
notation, etc., then you would have secured the copyright at that time.
Note, though, that
although registration isn't necessary to protect your work via the Copyright
Act, it is a precondition to suing in federal court. So if you write down a
song in 2001, discover that someone copied it in 2011, you'd have to register
the copyright (even in 2011 or 2012) before you could sue on it. Statutory
damages would also be limited to the date you registered onward (i.e., you
wouldn't be able to claim statutory damages from 2001 to present).
ANT Lawyers
- A
Law firm in Vietnam is supported by a team of experienced
copyright with qualification and skills handling full range of legal services
relating to intellectual property in Vietnam. We have
specialized in the preparation and registration of patents, trademarks and
designs for our clients.
We assist our clients
in all steps of the prosecution phase of IP management.
Source: Quora
0 nhận xét:
Đăng nhận xét