Find Laws Find Lawyers Free Legal Forms USA State Laws
Home » Find Laws » Copyright Laws » Copyright Protection » Read This About Photograph Copyright Before Submitting

Read This About Photograph Copyright Before Submitting

Photograph Copyright

Copyrights protect the authors of all creative forms of works which can be presented in typical mediums, such as books, motion pictures, or artwork. Essentially, the work needs to be presented in a tangible form. Photographs are one of these art forms that are offered copyright protection.

A photographer's work is always given protection the moment it is created and should be marked with an accompanying 'C' logo and year of creation to show that it has ownership. If the owner of the photograph would like to give their work added protection, especially if legal disputes arise, he or she can register a photograph with the United States Copyright Office.

Submitting Published and Unpublished Work

An author may submit single published and unpublished photographs, collections of unpublished photographs, and photographs published as a unit, such as a yearly calendar. The author should signify whether or not their work has already been published.


Copyright law states that a publication is the distribution of copies of a work to public sale or other transfer of ownership. If distribution occurs to another group for purposes of further distribution, this is also a publication. However, a public display of a work, such as a photograph, does not necessarily make it a publication. Also, copyright law does not clearly identify publication via online sources. It is left up to the author to understand whether or not his or her work has been published.

Submission Methods

A photographer can choose to, for a one-time fee, submit one published photograph, or submit a published collection of photographs. This can include a collection on a calendar, illustrations for a book, or a set of football cards.

For unpublished photographs, a one-time fee can be used to file one photograph or a collection of unpublished photographs. To be eligible for consideration, the photograph(s) must be:

Neatly compiled;

A title for a collection of photographs must be created;

The same party must be filing the claim for all photos submitted;

The author must be the creator of the photographs.

It should be noted that published and unpublished photographs cannot be combined in a copyright claim.

NEXT: What is Restored Works

Related Articles

Link To This Page

Comments

Browse Trademarks By Name

A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
M
N
O
P
Q
R
S
T
U
V
W
X
Y
Z

Browse Copyrights By Name

A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
M
N
O
P
Q
R
S
T
U
V
W
X
Y
Z
Find an CT Lawyer
Guide to Finding a Lawyer

MORE IN COPYRIGHT

What is Restored Works What is Restored Works
Tips