Your web site has been up for a few months and you are making money hand over foot. While surfing sites one evening, you are shocked to find a competitor using your design. You find out your designer sold them the same design. They must be breaking the law, right? It all depends on whether you own the copyright to your web site design. Many site owners are shocked to find out they do not.
What is Copyright?
Copyright is a method of protection for authors of original works such as literature, computer programs, music, artistic pieces and photographic images. The protection provided by copyright arises under Title 17 of the United States Code. A copyright gives the owner the exclusive right to do or authorize others to: reproduce, prepare derivative works, distribute copies, publicly display and generally use the material that carries the copyright in exchange for something, typically a royalty or fee. The copyright owner often grants this use through a license agreement, but can sell it outright.
Who Can Claim Copyright?
Copyright protection is created IMMEDIATELY upon the creation of a fixed form of the material in question and granted to the person that created the material. For instance, I automatically own the copyright to this article upon completing it. I am not required to file for an official copyright with the US Copyright Office to prove that I am the owner of the content. However, if I want to sue a person for using my article without permission, I must first register it.
What If I Hire Someone To Create A Web Site For Me?
If you hire a person or company to handle the design of your site, the complexities of copyright become a major issue for you. Specifically, the issue of "work for hire" is critical in determining whether you own the design.
"Work for hire" refers to the relationship between your business and the person creating your web site. If this person is an employee of your business and creates the material within their scope of employment, then your business owns the copyright. However, what happens when the designer is not an employee? In such a situation, the following must occur for the copyright to automatically transfer to you. The work must be specially ordered or commissioned for use as:
* A contribution to a collective work,
* A part of a motion picture or other audiovisual work,
* A translation,
* A supplementary work,
* A compilation,
* An instructional text,
* A test,
* Answer material for a test, or
* An atlas.
It is my opinion that the design of a web site does not fall into any of the above categories. As a result, you do not own the copyright to the design and can do nothing about the fact that one of your competitors is using the design. Obviously, this is not the answer that most site owners want to hear. So, what can you do to protect your business?
When you hire an outside party to design, alter, amend or improve your site, you must have them sign a written contract. The contract must include a clause clearly establishing that the copyright to the material produced is vested with you, not the designer. You should then file the contract with your important documents as some designers "forget" that assigned the copyright to you. Presenting a copy of the contract and noting that it allows for the recovery of attorney's fees usually solves the problem.
The issue of copyright ownership of a web site or aspect of a site pops up often. Finding your design being used on another domain is bad enough, but it can get worse. If you sell your business, the attorney for the party purchasing your business will always ask about the copyright of the site as part of the due diligence process. More than a few business deals have fallen apart when the lack of copyright ownership is discovered. Obtaining copyright at the outset of your business effort will avoid serious problems in the future.
Do You Own Your Web Site Design?
September 24, 2005
|
|
Richard Chapo, Esq., is with SanDiegoIncorporate.com. He can be contacted at Richard@sandiegoincorporate.com.
This article is for general education purposes and does not address every facet of the subject matter. Nothing in this article creates an attorney-client relationship.
Lastest Headlines for "Legal"
- Starting A Small Business? Get Legal Representation (Investor's Business Daily via Yahoo! News)
As you build a company, legal liability lurks around every corner. Just one innocent error can prove costly. - Republican Veep Nominee Is No Stranger to Legal Conflict (Law.com)
The nomination of Alaska's first female governor to the GOP ticket raised eyebrows Friday as a Washington insider picked the ultimate legal outsider. Unlike others touted as top VP contenders until almost the moment the choice was announced, Sarah Palin did not attend law school. The former journalist, mayor and Miss Alaska Beauty Pageant finalist has made friends as well as enemies in the legal ... - A lower legal drinking age? Health experts, college presidents debate (Los Angeles Times)
Both sides offer studies that support keeping or lowering the legal drinking age from 21 to 18. GORDIE BAILEY JR. had been in college only one month before he overdosed on alcohol. Urged on by members of a frat house he was intent on joining, the 18-year-old drank until he passed out, was dumped onto a couch and was found dead the next morning. The 2004 incident at the University of Colorado ... - More legal fights pending in Mich. speaker recall (Detroit Free Press)
LANSING — A federal judge late today rejected a bid by state House Speaker Andy Dillon to undo a court order that could result in a November recall election. But Dillon plans to continue his legal fight. - Legal aid row may delay Rhys case (BBC News)
The trial of a teenager accused of murdering schoolboy Rhys Jones could be delayed because of a legal aid row. - Two Murrieta initiatives tread 'legal land mines' (The Press-Enterprise)
MURRIETA - Two initiatives aimed at limiting pay for Murrieta City Council members and higher-ranking city officials are littered with enough legal problems that, if they passed, could end up in court, the city attorney said. - Speaking of "Destroying Competition," Meet Our Legal Team From Mortify, Debase and Demolish LLP (AllThingsD Online via Yahoo! Finance)
Apple legal has some interesting weekend reading ahead of it. Mac clone maker Psystar filed its 54-page countersuit against Apple late Thursday, and as expected, it accuses the company of restraint of trade, unfair competition, and other violations of antitrust law. "[Apple has ] engaged in copyright misuse through the use of an illicit tying ... - New Bochco legal drama merely nudges "Bar" (Reuters via Yahoo! News)
Had it come from practically any other producer, TNT's "Raising the Bar," premiering Monday at 10 p.m., might be worthy of mild praise. It is, after all, a solid legal drama with several appealing characters and above-average dialogue. - Man 5 times over legal limit charged with DUI (Miami Herald)
Authorities say a Naples man driving through Hernando County had a blood-alcohol level more than five times above the legal limit. - MLGW Lets Lee off Legal Fee Hook (The Memphis Daily News)
Memphis Light, Gas and Water Division is poised to pay several hundred thousand dollars in legal fees incurred by its former president and CEO Joseph ....