What are copyright laws?
Subject: Website Copyright Protection...
Courtesy of: WebProNews.Com
What are copyright laws? How do they affect my firm and
how do they
affect me? What are my responsibilities and why
should I care?
These are all questions that most developers and
website owners
have thought about at one item or another. This
article deals
with all of these questions and it will give you a
starting
point for your own firm’s copyright protection plan.
Copyright protection. Sometimes misapplied,
sometimes misunderstood,
sometimes disregarded but at all times a concern not
to be neglected.
If you own a website or if you are involved with
designing websites,
you need to know as much as possible about how
copyright laws
affect you. That’s because, if you aren’t properly
protected,
it could end up costing you a lot of time and a lot
of money.
Although not intended as legal advice and not
written as a legal
guide, this article explains, in layman’s terms,
your copyright
responsibilities as a website owner, developer or
programmer
and how to protect yourself from possible future
legal actions.
Copyright protection law is applicable to all
websites on the
Internet and they vary by country. Copyright laws
apply to the
written content of websites as well as the design
elements,
the images and the programming code contained within
them.
International copyright law follows the
International Copyright
Protection agreements established by the Berne
Convention and
the Universal Copyright Convention (UCC). These
agreements,
between member countries, guarantee recognition of
authors’
copyright protection in many countries at once as
long as the
work is published in two or more Berne Union
countries within
thirty days of its first publication.
Regardless if your website is global or not, you
need to adhere
to International Copyright Protection Standards to
fully protect
your firm and yourself. It is a very simple matter
to adhere
to these standards. All you have to do is have the
Copyright
Owner’s name and the date of first publication on
the work along
with the © symbol.
Your copyright notice should be placed on every page
of your
website, including your source code. It should be
located in
a place that gives reasonable notice of copyright
and it should
conform to the following structure:
Copyright © 2002 John Doe
The date of first publication is the date that the
work was
first electronically saved on disk or printed on
hard copy.
Copyright protection lasts until fifty years after
the author’s
death.
What are you protected from? It protects you from
having a person,
a firm or an entity copy part or all of your website
content
and claim ownership of it as their own.
What does it prevent us from doing? It prevents us
from copying
some portion of a copyrighted website, placing it on
our website(s)
and them claiming that it is ours.
By placing a copyright notice on your website, you
are declaring
that you have express permission to use all material
or that
you actually own all material contained within your
site. This
includes all images, sound, programming code, logos,
written
material and design. If you copy anything from a
website that
you do not own (even page layout design) and then
publish it
on a website that you do own, you are committing
copyright infringement.
Material found on the web may be copied freely only
if the information
is created by the federal government (Public
Domain), if the
copyright has expired or if the copyright has been
abandoned.
You must remember that images (including graphics,
logos and
photos), writing, text, HTML, programming code, Java
script,
Midi’s etc. that you are given permission to use or
display
does not mean that you can claim copyright to it.
Permission
does not make you the owner.
Depending upon the owner, the permission terms may
vary. Whatever
the case, it is important to include text on the
same page as
the material being loaned is used that specifies who
the real
owner is and that the material is being used by
permission.
"Shareware" and "Free Graphics" are provided on some
websites
and they encourage you to use them on your website
freely. What
are your copyright responsibilities? You are being
allowed to
use this material free if you adhere to the owner’s
conditions.
Make sure that you understand these conditions and
that you
apply them when using this material on your website.
Do not
claim copyright ownership protection on the page(s)
displaying
this material without making sure to claim
permission for their
use.
Take caution that you do not claim "Public Domain"
and "Fair
Use" materials as your own by placing your copyright
notice
on pages that contain Fair Use and shared materials.
Public
Domain is information published by the government
and it is
freely available to the public. Fair Use is
utilization of copyrighted
material, without the permission of the owner, for
the purposes
of news, reporting, research, education and /or
parody. Use
of such material for any other purpose is not Fair
Use and it
remains protected under Copyright Protection laws.
Make sure
that you do not claim copyright ownership for
either.
As a final assurance that your copyrighted materials
are protected,
your copyright can be registered with the United
States Copyright
Office. The fee is $30 and you will have to register
there if
you ever decide to claim copyright infringement. You
can also
find information about current copyright protection
laws at
the United States Copyright Office website (see
below).
Another alternative is to place your material on
hardcopy or
portable disk, place it in an envelope, seal it and
then mail
it to yourself. Have the mailing certified and you
will have
proof that you authored the material on or before
the post-marked
date. Make sure not to open the envelope after you
have received
it. Place it unopened in a plastic bag and store it
for future use.
About the Author:
R. Dale Bowyer is a
graduate of Oberlin College with a degree in
economics and East Asian Studies. He has been involved with
Internet e-commerce since 1994 when he created the National
Institute of Industrial Management web site for occupational
safety and health issues. Mr. Bowyer also founded LindaleUSA,
a national charity helping to feed hungry children in
America.
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