July 18th, 2009 at 04:27pm
Under copyright infringement
I know someone who makes covers and want to use one in a video, would it count as copyright infringement? I need to know ASAP!!
(The reason I’m asking is I don’t want to destroy my chance to be partners with Youtube, so the real question is: Would is violate Youtube Rules to use a cover song in a video?)
By Copyright Law Enquirer
July 15th, 2009 at 12:44am
Under music copyright
Songwriting is a cathartic exercise that allows musicians to escape the conundrums of daily routines. From the first spark of melody to the flicker of promising lyrics, the process of creating something from nothing is genuinely rewarding. Just as painters display their work on gallery walls, song writers are driven to gauge public reaction of their compositions. Whether performing the number at an open mic night at the corner coffee house or posting it on a music community sites like Echoboost.com, the music is out in the open to entertain audiences.
However, many songwriters hesitate before sharing their creative property for fear of other artists stealing their original ideas. This is where a copyright comes in. It’s important to note that original work is copyrighted the moment it is recorded on paper, computer file or disc. Protecting the work, though, is another issue.
According to the U.S. Copyright Office, “Copyright is a form of protection provided by the laws of the United States to the authors of ‘original works of authorship’…It is illegal for anyone to violate any of the rights provided by the copyright law to the owner of the copyright.” The official U.S. Copyright site features a list of these rights and includes the three basic steps to securing your own official sound recording copyright–which requires an approximate six-month turn around and a $45 registering fee.
For home made artists looking for a cheap alternative to the watertight and time-tested U.S. Copyright Office method, the myth of the “poor man’s copyright” may satisfy. The basic concept is to mail a copy of the work (recorded song and lyrics) to yourself and leave the envelope unopened until the day you have to prove you created the material yourself. Unfortunately, it would be easy to fraudulently duplicate this method by mailing an unsealed envelope to yourself and, therefore, appears to hold little legal value. For more pros and cons on the poor man’s copyright, visit CopyrightAuthority.com, which notes “Cheap copyright methods have never proved as reliable as the official methods.”
Posting songs online at sites like Echoboost.com could be considered a new, tech-savvy poor man’s copyright since you would have a link to the existing music in addition to the website’s record of the original posting date. A search for information to back up this simple online copyright solution came up empty, so it may or may not be any more effective than mailing a copy of the song to yourself.
Music business attorney and author Don Passman said it best in a Taxi.com article when he backed up the argument to go through proper channels when claiming ownership for creative material: “You don’t need it to register the copyright in Washington, but it is a nice piece of evidence. If someone claims he wrote the song on such-and-such a date, and you can prove you wrote it before that, then it helps.”
Read additional music-related articles by visiting
Echoboost.com or
the
Echoboost Blog.
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By Copyright Law
July 14th, 2009 at 10:26pm
Under music copyright
Hi, I’ve got a potentially stupid question – I’ve got a song I’d like to protect with copyright but I don’t really understand the extent to which my song would be protected. I live in Ireland, so if I copyrighted the song over here, would that ONLY protect the song in Ireland, or is the song also legally protected abroad, say in the UK/US?
By Copyright Law Enquirer
July 13th, 2009 at 04:26am
Under music copyright
I want to start a new website and I wish to have a ‘dedicate a song’ feature for the members registered on my site. Will I land up in legal trouble on copyright issues?
By Copyright Law Enquirer
July 12th, 2009 at 04:27am
Under copyright infringement
I’m writing a novel, my first one, and I would like to use song lyrics from Johnny Cash’s “Ring of Fire” for some of the chapter titles. Is that copyright infringement? The song, in part or entirety, appears nowhere within the text of the novel.
By Copyright Law Enquirer
July 9th, 2009 at 10:25am
Under music copyright
You write a song, put it in a music program note by note, print out sheet music, get the copyright….., someone sings it on an album and it’s played on the air. What are the missing steps between the copyright and the album? Please don’t tell me to make a demo. I am not a performer. Tell me who to contact first. What kind of person or place to contact first. I did what I can do, now I need to know how to get involved in the business part of music.
By Copyright Law
July 9th, 2009 at 10:24am
Under copyright act
well I’m doing a project for school and i want to know if the copyright act of 1976 section 107 “fair use” will let me use more than 30 seconds of a song.
By Copyright Law