Copyright.

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I notice that for the past couple of days a copyright notice has appeared on my stories, and many of the others posted recently.

As it obviously takes time to do, there has to be a good reason why it's being done. Are we being plagiarised and sold for huge sums of cash - or in my case used Mars bar wrappers?

I'm not complaining - never managed to find the key for an umlaut let alone a copyright symbol, and I am happy to admit ownership of my witterings, so just curious, like Alice.

Angharad chwilfrydig.

Comments

That would be me Angharad

If you reopen your story under the edit tab, you will find the copyright symbol inside in the little string I added. It's good practice to copyright your material, because it can save you a headache later should someone plagiarize your material or tries to claim they wrote it. You don't have to have it on there. Just it makes good safety sense.

=^.^=
 

Sephrena Lynn Miller
BigCloset TopShelf
TGLibrary.com
 
 
I am always watching over you. Protecting you...
Come out into the light and enjoy life.

Under the Berne Convention...

The presence or absence of a copyright notice is theoretically irrelevant. This was done to conform with the requirements for visual arts, or audible arts for that matter, which don't require the artist to deface a work of art with a copyright notice. There's a move in the USA, on the other hand, to allow infringers to make use of copyrighted material with minimal damages available if they've made a "reasonable effort" to obtain a release for a particular use.

What does make a difference is registration. Without registration, one is limited to actual damages, which is very difficult to prove if one is giving it away for free, and attorney's fees may not be available. With registration, one may choose statutory damages rather than actual, although the amount of "statutory" damages may also be small is the work was originally distributed gratis. With registration, attorney's fees may be available as well. Notice may help to show the the infringement wasn't "innocent, " but it's easy to say that one found a copy on the Web with no notice attached, so the addition of a notice couldn't hurt, but probably won't help all that much either.

The reality is that copyright law is a game for those with deep pockets, and part-time writers are unlikely to be able to mount any serious case, unless one has enough ducks in a row, and an infringer with enough money that it would be worthwhile suing the infringer.

This is why the lawyers went after Napster, although they were relatively innocent third parties, and made only token efforts against the actual infringers, who were mostly young people with no assets to speak of. Napster had assets.

Big mistake. What they should have done was create a company which owned the assets, and then rented them to another company with at least nominally different management.

Cheers,

Liobhan

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Cheers,

Liobhan

UK copyright

shiraz's picture

Copyright law in the UK is a tad confusing and it is recommended that all intellectual property is © . It used to be the case that you were told to put a paper copy of any material in the post, recorded delivery and addressed to yourself. Once received you do not open the envelope, simply put it away. At any time in the future you have unequivocal proof of prior ownership, so long as the aggrieved party can't prove earlier ownership!

From wikipedia:

Under the 1988 Act [Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988], the first owner of a copyright is assumed to be the author of the work. If a work is made by an author in the course of employment then the author's employer is the first owner of copyright.

Unlike American copyright law, the duration of the copyright term does not (after the commencement of the 1956 Act) vary depending on who owns the copyright.

The author of a work is:

* The creator of a literary, musical, dramatic or artistic work.
* The publisher of a published edition of a work.
* The producer of a sound recording.
* The producer and principal director of a film.
* The maker of a broadcast.
* If a work is computer generated, the person who made the arrangements necessary for the creation of the work.

If more than one person qualifies as an author then a work is one of joint authorship. In that case the permission of all copyright holders is required for acts that would otherwise be an infringement of copyright. It is quite possible for more than one copyright to subsist within a work.

 
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Argh

rebecca.a's picture

You do not need to put a © symbol on your work for it to be copyrighted, in any country that's a signatory to the Berne convention (which is most countries), including (since 1989) the United States. Using a © symbol hasn't been necessary in the US since the 1980s.

Registration is also unnecessary. Mailing the item to yourself ("poor man's copyright") is utterly worthless.

You write it, you own it. You have only to prove that you wrote it first (but courts won't accept mail as proof)

Nor can you place work in the public domain. You can give it away, but that's not the same thing as making it public domain. If you want to give it away, the best way is to allow it to be used under a royalty free license. This is not public domain. Under copyright law something only becomes public domain when the copyright expires.

What you should consider more than claiming copyright it is enforcing it. Like most legal rights, it's only useful insofar as you can do something in the event someone steals your work. If you're writing under a pseudonym, and have previously given it away for free, it's unlikely to be worth defending your copyright in court.

In other words, don't sweat it. The chance that anyone who posts here is going to have a major copyright issue worth defending is pretty slim.


not as think as i smart i am

Characters

On a Windows machine hold down the alt key and type 0169 on the number pad to get the copyright symbol. Characters with an umlaut or other special can be added by going to the character map - Start/Programs/Accessories/System Tools/Character Map. This brings up a grid with all the characters in a particular font. Select the character and you'll see its numerical equivalent at the bottom of the window.

One caveat, however. If you're publishing on the web there's no guarantee the font on the web site will use the same special characters as the font on your computer.

mac

rebecca.a's picture

and on a mac, use option+g to get the copyright symbol.


not as think as i smart i am