Registration of Online Works - Works
that are made available online may contain a variety of
different types of content, each of which may be protected
under the copyright act. Web sites will often contain textual
content, graphics, music, video, sound, databases, scripts,
programs and forms integration. Most of these various aspects
of a web site, if registered separately, would require use
of different registration forms and content, Each of these
various aspects would also normally require different archives
and procedures of obtaining a valid registration. This greatly
complicates the process of registering online works.
Additionally, many web sites are frequently
updated. The content of web sites changes frequently. This
is particularly the case with sites that contain news updates
and other time sensitive information which may be updated
daily or more frequently.
Another problems that currently existed
when registering online works is that the copyright regulations
have not yet caught up with the new technologies. This often
leaves a copyright applicant without a great deal of guidance
on the key issues relating to the application. The Copyright
Office has issued some guidance on registering online works.
However, the guidance that has been released by the Copyright
Office generally does not answer the more difficult questions
involved in copyrighting web sites that include a variety
of different types of content.
The information that has been put out by
the Copyright Office suggests that it is permissible to
file a single registration covering the text, graphics,
video, sounds and other material that comprise a web site.
However, where music ison the web site which is not integrated
with a series of images or a video clip, the musical aspects
of the site will need to be separately registered to assure
protection. Additionally, the Copyright Office has stated
that computer programs, databases and works that are fixed
on a CD ROM, must be separately registered as well.
When copyrighting a web site, special precaution
must be taken to assure that all aspects of the web site
are properly protected. Failure to properly register a component
of the web site can lead to a loss of the benefits of copyright
registration, including statutory damage and attorney fee
awards that are made available as a result of a valid registration.
You should also consider carefully questions
of authorship and ownership of the work. Web sites are a
breading ground for authorship problems, which if not properly
considered and solved up front can pop up to haunt you down
the road. Many web site projects require the efforts of
a diverse range of participants. A high end web site may
include input from the client, a web developer, a graphic
artist, musician and music producers, video producer, programmers,
database creators and others. All can potentially have claims
of ownership or joint ownership to the web site or components
of the web site depending on their involvement in the project
and their relationship to the various parties involved in
the process.
In order to register valid copyright, you
must either be the author if the work as defined under the
copyright laws, or you must have received an assignment
from the author. All of the individual listed above can
often claim that they are authors or joint authors of portions
of the work. Where this is the case, assignments and acknowledgments
must be obtained in advance to assure that you have complete
unrestricted rights to the work.
[Copyright
Myths] [Reasons
For Registering A Copyright] [Copyright
Notice]