Forum Moderators: not2easy
farmboy said: If you register a website with the U.S. copyright office, is there a need to update the registration as updates are made to the site?
If you add entirely new content, this is not, to my understanding, covered under the previous copyright registration.
If you just edit your pages (correcting typoes, updating statistical information, etc), then the resulting "derivative works" should, I believe, be covered by the existing registration.
farmboy said: If a site is registered, are downloadable documents on the site covered by the registration?
Eliz.
farmboy said: That would seem to indicate that a site that has new content added daily needs to be registering or "re-registering" daily? Surely there is a process for this.
For traditional media (like newspapers), I believe the process is a once-a-month sort of thing. I haven't looked into the analagous process for a frequently-updated web site. But you might try poking around on the Copyright.gov site, to see what they've got there.
Eliz.
Hmmm. That would seem to indicate that a site that
has new content added daily needs to be registering or "re-registering" daily? Surely there is a process for this.
The saving grace is that you don't need to file a copyright immediately for the full protection. There's a three month grace period for filing on any newly published material, so filing once every three months wth all the updates is just as good as filing every day.
Copyright office has a pretty good phamplet about website copyright, Circular 66, which you can get as a PDF on their website.