Hello All,
I am really interested in copy righting my work but I am not really sure how. I am confused to what or how I should go about copyrighting my images. I have investigated the copyright website but still confused to the process of WHAT SHOULD BE COPY WRITTEN.
To those of you who have copy written your work, should I copyright my signature or each image singularly?
Are there ways around this as an artist?
Thank you,
Gerald C. Lewis Sr.
One way is to print out and sign with your signature on it whatever it is you want to copyright and then put in an envelope and mail it through the Postal system to yourself. Or put them all on a cd and sign the cd and send it to yourself as with a printed version.
Then when it arrives back, do not open it, but it should have a cancellation date over the stamp(s). That's proof of date and time of authorship by a Federal institution.
Anything produced by others after or around and about that date would be very likely considered as a copyright infringement.
the 'dd'
digital demon said: One way is to print out and sign with your signature on it whatever it is you want to copyright and then put in an envelope and mail it through the Postal system to yourself. Or put them all on a cd and sign the cd and send it to yourself as with a printed version. Then when it arrives back, do not open it, but it should have a cancellation date over the stamp(s). That's proof of date and time of authorship by a Federal institution. Anything produced by others after or around and about that date would be very likely be considered a copyright infringement.
Anything produced by others after or around and about that date would be very likely be considered a copyright infringement.
That's all that is required. You only need to prove you did it first. Whether you can afford to defend that in court is a different thing.
If your serious then you need to get legal insurance. That costs a few hundred a year and covers about $30K in legal fees.
Unless you can afford to defend it, it's worth squat.
Something like this...http://www.legalaccess.com.au/all/Article.aspx?ArticleId=37
However, the real meat of the cover is the pursuit component. This gives an insured party the muscle to pursue their rights and safely punch above their weight, making their opponents aware they are willing and able to proceed.
[sorry took me a few goes to find a decent reference]