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Copyright Topics

Copyright Items Our Firm Can Help With

- Copyright Protection

- Copyright Ownership

- Patent

- Nondramatic Textual Works

- Music Copyright

- Reproduce Material Recorded

- New Invention

- Literary Works

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Copyrights FAQs


Question: When is my creative work protected?

Answer:"Your work is under copyright protection the moment it is created and fixed in a tangible."


FAQs Related To Copyright Ownership & Copyright Topics


Question: Can I use a stage name or a pen name?

Answer:There is no legal requirement that the author be identified by his or her real name on the application form.




Question: What is music licensing?

Answer:"Music licensing is the process of licensing, or negotiating permission, to use an existing piece of music. The ""license"" is a document that is created to document the terms and conditions that are negotiated for the usage of the music."




Question: Does the copyright office have special mailing requirements?

Answer:Our only requirement is that all three elements the application, the copy or copies of the work, and the filing fee be sent in the same package.





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Copyright News

Improper Font Management Could Have Companies Sleeping with the Fishes
It seems seldom addressed, but international intellectual property laws and copyrights extend to typefaces used by companies everywhere.

U. S. Copyright Office Welcomes Students During Copyright Awareness Week
students and teachers from across the country are invited to visit the Librarys James Madison Building to meet with copyright specialists

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Helpful Terms

Patent

Definition:
In the United States, a grant by the federal government to an inventor of the right to exclude others from making, using, or selling the invention. There are three very different kinds of patents in the United States: a utility patent on the functional aspects of products and processes; a design patent on the ornamental design of useful objects; and a plant patent on a new variety of living plant. Patents do not protect "ideas," only structures and methods that apply technological concepts. In return for receiving the right to exclude others from a precisely defined scope of technology, industrial design, or plant variety, which is the gist of a patent, the inventor must fully disclose the details of the invention to the public.

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