Copyright, body of legal rights that protect creative works from being reproduced, performed, or disseminated by others without permission. The owner of copyright has the exclusive right to reproduce a protected work; to prepare derivative works that only slightly change the protected work; to sell or lend copies of the protected work to the public; to perform protected works in public for profit; and to display copyrighted works publicly. These basic exclusive rights of copyright owners are subject to exceptions depending on the type of work and the type of use made by others.
The term work used in copyright law refers to any original creation of authorship produced in a tangible medium. Thus, works that can be copyrighted include literary pieces, musical compositions, dramatic selections, dances, photographs, drawings, paintings, sculpture, diagrams, advertisements, maps, motion pictures, radio and television programs, sound recordings, and-by special legislation passed by the Congress of the United States in 1980-computer software programs.
Copyright does not protect the idea or concept;
it only protects the way in which an author has expressed an idea
or concept. If, for example, a scientist publishes an article
explaining a new process for making a medicine, the copyright
prevents others from substantially copying the article, but it
does not prevent anyone from using the process described to prepare
the medicine. In order to protect the process, the scientist must
obtain a patent.
History of Copyright
The first real copyright law, enacted in 1710 by the British Parliament, was the Statute of Anne. This law forbade the unauthorized printing, reprinting, or importing of books for a limited number of years.
In the United States, the founding fathers recognized
the need to encourage creativity by protecting authors. They placed
in the Constitution of the United States a provision giving Congress
the power "to promote the progress of science and useful
arts, by securing for limited times to authors and inventors the
exclusive right to their respective writings and discoveries"
(Art. I, Sect. 8). This provision gave the federal government
the power to enact copyright and patent statutes. In 1790, Congress
passed the first U.S. copyright law. Since then, the copyright
statutes have been expanded and changed by Congress many times.
A major revision of U.S. law was made in the 1909 Copyright Act,
which remained the basic framework for protection until January
1, 1978, when the Copyright Act of 1976 went into effect. The
1976 act, which is the legal basis for copyright protection today,
made substantial and important changes in U.S. law.
Copyright in the United States
The 1976 Copyright Act established a single system
of federal statutory protection for all eligible works, both published
and unpublished. For works created after January 1, 1978, copyright
becomes the property of the author the moment the work is created
and lasts for the author's life plus 50 years. When a work is
created by an employee in the normal course of a job, however,
the copyright becomes the property of the employer and lasts for
75 years from publication or 100 years from creation, whichever
is shorter. For works created before 1978, the old act provided
that the copyright endured for 28 years and might be extended
for another 28 years, for a maximum of 56 years from publication.
The new act "stretched" the term of copyrights existing
on January 1, 1978, so that they would last for about 75 years
from publication.
Notice
Although copyright becomes effective on creation of a work, it is lost unless a prescribed copyright notice is placed on all publicly distributed copies. This notice consists either of the word Copyright, the abbreviation Copr., or the symbol © accompanied by the name of the owner and the year of first publication (for example, © John Doe 1982). In most printed books the copyright notice appears on the reverse side of the title page. The use of the notice is the responsibility of the copyright owner and does not require advance permission from, or registration with, the Copyright Office. A similar notice bearing the symbol ® (for example, ® 1982 Doe Record Company) is required to protect sound recordings such as phonograph records and tapes.
A work is not fully protected until a copyright
claim has been registered with the Copyright Office in Washington,
D.C. To register, the author must fill out the application, pay
a fee, and send two complete copies of a published work or recording,
which will be placed in the Library of Congress. The sooner the
claim to copyright is registered, the more remedies the author
may have in any litigation.
Licensing
Copyright can be sold or licensed to others. Licenses of copyrights are normally granted in written contracts agreed to by all parties involved. For example, an author of a novel can license one publisher to print the work in hardbound copies, another publisher to produce paperback copies, and a motion-picture company to make a movie based on the novel. A sale or license of copyright made after January 1, 1978, can be terminated by the author (or by the author's family) 35 years after the sale or license. The purpose of allowing such a termination is to permit an author to obtain more financial reward if the work remains commercially valuable over a long period of time. For the sale or license made before 1978, the author has a similar right of termination 56 years from the copyright date.
The 1976 law sets up conditions for reproduction
of copies by libraries and archives and for transmission of audiovisual
and other programs and forbids unauthorized duplication of sound
recordings. It provides for royalty payments on recorded music,
on public performance of sound recordings by coin-operated phonographs,
and on transmission of some television programs. A radio station
that broadcasts a recording of copyrighted music is "performing"
the work publicly and for profit and must be licensed to do so.
In 1984, however, the Supreme Court of the United States ruled
that noncommercial use of videocassette recorders does not violate
copyright law.
Infringement
Copyright infringement is any violation of the exclusive rights mentioned above-for example, making an unauthorized copy of a copyrighted book. Infringement does not necessarily constitute word-for-word reproduction; "substantial similarity" may also be infringement.
Generally, copyright infringements are dealt with
in civil lawsuits in federal court. If infringement is proved,
the copyright owner has several remedies available. The court
may order an injunction against future infringement; the destruction
of infringing copies; reimbursement for any financial loss incurred
by the copyright owner; transfer of profits made from the sale
of infringing copies; and payment of fixed damages (usually between
$250 and $10,000) for each work infringed, as well as court costs
and attorney's fees. In a few cases, a criminal penalty of imprisonment
and/or a fine can be imposed for knowingly infringing the copyright
for profit.
Fair Use
An exception to the rule of copyright infringement
is the concept known as fair use, which permits the reproduction
of small amounts of copyrighted material when the copying will
have little effect on the value of the original work. Examples
of fair use include the quotation of excerpts from a book, poem,
or play in a critical review for purposes of illustration or comment;
quotation of short passages in a scholarly or technical book to
illustrate or clarify the author's observations; use in a parody
of some of the work being parodied; summary of a speech or article,
with brief quotations, in a news report; and reproduction by a
teacher or student of a small part of a work to illustrate a lesson.
Because works produced and published by the U.S. government cannot
be copyrighted, material from the many publications put out by
the U.S. Government Printing Office may be reproduced without
fear of infringement.
Advances in Technology
Technological development has produced and will
continue to produce new and different ways to store information
in smaller and smaller spaces, retrievable by electronic methods.
Congress, in passing the 1976 Copyright Act, recognized that it
could not foresee all the new methods of fixing or storing information.
Accordingly, it broadly defined the category of copyrightable
material to include all "original works of authorship fixed
in any tangible medium of expression, now known or later developed,
from which they can be perceived, reproduced, or otherwise communicated,
either directly or with the aid of a machine or device."
Thus, an author who types a story on a computer keyboard, which
stores it on a tape or disc in computer memory, has "fixed"
the work on a "copy" sufficient for copyright protection.
International Copyright
Almost every nation has some form of copyright protection for authors and artists. Few, however, require the formalities necessary under U.S. law, such as marking published copies with a formal copyright notice and registering the claim with the Copyright Office.
The United States is a member of the Universal Copyright Convention (UCC), an international treaty organization in effect since 1955, designed to eliminate discrimination against foreigners in copyright protection. More than 70 nations belong to the UCC. Every member nation must give foreign works that meet UCC requirements the same copyright protection as that nation gives to domestic works and authors. An American who wishes to secure copyright protection in the United States and in UCC member nations at the same time can do so by marking all published copies with a copyright notice that satisfies the provisions of both the UCC treaty and domestic U.S. law. This notice includes the symbol ©, the name of the copyright owner, and the year of first publication. Although no such thing as an "international copyright" exists, it is easy for an author to obtain copyright protection in many nations.
Several other international conventions also provide
copyright protection. As of March 1, 1989, the United States became
a member of the Berne Convention, which protects without formalities
any works first published in a member nation. The Buenos Aires
Convention, a multilateral treaty of North and South American
nations including the United States, requires a statement such
as "All Rights Reserved" to be printed in the copyright
notice. In February 1995 the United States and China signed an
agreement to prevent companies in China from illegally manufacturing
items, such as compact discs and computer software, in violation
of American copyrights. The United States estimated that this
piracy was causing American businesses to lose $1 billion a year.
To stop copyright violations, China agreed to establish task forces
and increase the power of customs officials.
Contributed by:
J. Thomas McCarthy