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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 a competitor
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 they 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. |