Forum Moderators: not2easy
- I run "example.com"
- "example" is not incorporated, has not filed a "doing business as" declaration or anything else that legally says that I own it, other than the fact that the domain registration is in my name
- I say all copy and images are copyright "example"
Is there still any copyright protection? What's the minimum I need (USA, California if that matters) to be able to have copyright protection for my materials copyrighted under "example" rather than my name?
Thanks
Tom
Most folks follow the copyright procedures in place at the US Library of Congress to ensure that when the time comes to defend their ownership, they have a well-recognized legal trail to rely on for that defense.
The bottom line is that while you are allowed to place the copyright notice on your work as you have done, and in fact your work is technically copyrighted from the moment it is created, the trick is proving that in court when a challenge is presented. Make sure you go the extra mile by registering your work with the Copyright Office.
What I've never fully understood is how it works on a website, in the sense that I want new work (i.e. new pages) to be protected as they are created. Ideally, too, people who contribute pages (i.e. articles) would have their copyright protected either directly or indirectly through me.
The model is more like that of a serial or periodical, but the US Copyright Office would seemingly define such a website as a literary work.
Tom
As for my contributors, they would, presumably, be covered under standard copyright rules governing contributions to collective works.