Onsite Services in our offices in Washington, DC, are available by appointment. To submit claims, request certified copies of certificates or copyright deposits, or request searches, visit our Public Information Office by making an appointment here. Copyright Office Reading Room services are available in the James Madison Memorial Building, room LM-463.

This featured video highlights The Orrin G. Hatch-Bob Goodlatte Music Modernization Act (Music Modernization Act) the most significant piece of copyright legislation in decades and updates our current laws to reflect modern consumer preferences and technological developments in the music marketplace.


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This is an issue that's getting ridiculous... I make vlogs, interviews, informative videos, funny videos outside in the world. Sometimes I'm in a mall or cafe or whatever, and the goal of my videos are to record my voice and the other person who's involved voice and our moment together. In some videos I don't even care about the surroundings. Yet... There seems to play Elvis in the background or some other music that I don't even care for and..... I get a copyright strike or my video gets blocked from the whole world.

I can't edit out the music without editing out my own voice or the other persons voice. It's all one part of the video that was recorded. I don't think I should tell a cafe for example to stop playing music so I don't get a copyright strike or my video gets blocked in some way.

Is there any way to add a copyright message to the background of each page?

I could not see this feature in the app, so I have created a proper transparent image. Then I added this image to the top of the wireframes. It appears properly, but the links stop working because the image cowers the components

There are several ways to eliminate liability of infringement from incidental music. First and foremost, be aware of the environment when shooting your video and try to reduce the likelihood of capturing unintended sound. Invest in a good set of directional microphones, perhaps. If the sound is already recorded, then you could either replace the copyrighted music with royalty free music, which can be found by your favorite search engine, or you could obtain a license to use it. Some websites, such as www.slynth.com, offer licenses. A Master Use License, which can be obtained only from the owner of the recording (e.g., a record company), is for previously recorded material. These agreements are legal documents and can be drafted by a lawyer or obtained through an online legal resource website. The amount you will have to pay varies. A helpful website is www.licensequote.com, which provides estimates as to the fees.

Deciding which option to pursue is a matter of personal choice. The information in this article merely outlines the issue of wild sound and provides options. The safest thing to do in the aforementioned scenario is to obtain a written license to use the material, even if it is in the background and unintentionally part of your work, or to edit out the wild sound.

Hello. 

After researching a bit, I found that many manga artists use real photos and Trace over them for backgrounds. This makes their at much more beautiful. Of course, most of them have a team that works for them, including one or more person just to draw the backgrounds and take pictures.

Well, we, as amateur artists, don't have this honor. We are not paid for our art, and can't work full time on our comics sure to work, studies, etc. So I wonder if we could use the taken photos as backgrounds, those at Google images, or even royalty free ones (those tend to suck, unfortunately).

There is nothing inherently wrong with using photos for your backgrounds. Like you said, many professionals do it. But if you're going to do this, take the photos yourself. First off because yes, those photos are the IP of whoever took the, and secondly because only you know what's needed for each panel's background, meaning only you can take the proper photos.

Everyone automatically has copyright on their own photos, no matter how crappy they might be, just like with drawings. You say "average Joes like you and me", as if there's a clear difference between us and hobby photographers. There isn't though, (I'm sure some of us are hobby photographers too,) and unless the photographer says "go ahead and use it however you want" you have to assume that all the rights are with the dude who pressed the shutter button. An exception is portraits, where the portrayed person needs to consent and has rights as well. So your best bet is to either take your own photos, or use multiple references and don't make exact copies. If your drawing looks nothing like the photo you're fine.

There have been many amendments and changes to copyright law over the years, but one of the most well known is the Sonny Bono Copyright Extension Act, passed in 1998 when Mr. Bono was serving in Congress. This act changed the duration of copyright from 50 years to 70 years in the case of known individual authors, and from 75 to 95 years in the case of corporate authorship. Hence, the former entertainer is often associated with the seemingly endless modern copyright terms.

The Digital Millenium Copyright Act, or DMCA, is an oft-villified piece of legislation passed in 1998 which represents effort by Congress to overhaul copyright law for the digital age. From Bonner et al:

The reason DMCA is so relevant to colleges and universities is rule #3. The network provided to students, faculty and staff which allows them out into the wider internet is a conduit over which many things may occur: email, social networking, research...and copyright infringement. This part of the DMCA provides protection from monetary damanges for the college in its role as a service provider, but only if the institution meets all the requirements set forth in the legistlation.

Arguments for this case were heard by the Supreme Court in late 2011, and the issue at hand is: "Can Congress restore copyright protection to a work whose copyright protection had previously expired and was therefore in the public domain?" There's a good summary in the first part of this SCOTUSblog entry. Update: decision was handed down in January 2012, and the court ruled that works which had previously passed into the public domain could be placed back under copyright by Congress.

You may know it as one of the coursepack cases. From the case: "[P]laintiffs allege that Kinko's infringed their copyrights when Kinko's copied excerpts from books, whose rights are held by the plaintiffs, without permission and without payment of required fees and sold the copies for a profit."

Software can implicate both copyright and patent rights. A recent revision to the copyright ownership administrative policy clarified that while patent rights in software are retained by the University (see Board of Regent policy: Commercialization of Intellectual Property Rights), the copyright in software created as an academic work would be owned by the faculty creator(s)..

Please forgive me if I am not very good with my words, I may be over thinking this, I just want to make sure I do not have any loose ends in a large project I am working on. I have looked extensively through the zoom website to look for this information, but I cant seem to find anything relating to virtual background video copyright/licensing & rights.


I am trying to find specific information on using a virtual background video, provided by zoom, in a meeting that will be streamed on twitch and uploaded to youtube, the virtual background video is specifically the northern lights one.

I need to know if the virtual background video is copywritten, how is it licensed? Do I need to pay attribution in form of a notification that this video belongs to zoom in my end credits scene? 


Considering the intended purposes of zoom can include broadcasting your video to streams and other services, is it just assumed that the virtual background video is being used as intended, without any obligation to the video's creator? I assume the video is property of zoom.

Copyright refers to a body of exclusive rights granted by law to copyright owners for the protection of their original works of authorship. By U.S. law, original works are protected by copyright automatically at the time of their creation. A copyright symbol or notice is not required.

This protection lasts the lifetime of the creator plus 70 years or 120 years from the date of creation. The creator of a work can sell or license its copyright protection to a publisher. In general, works created before 1923 are in the public domain, meaning they can be used by the public for free.

I would like to collect all the pictures from the various Ubuntu wallpapers together with their appropriate credits/license. I found how to get the packages thanks to this question and I found where to find the copyright info thanks to this one. Apparently the files are installed in /usr/share/backgrounds/ and the filenames seem to always include the author's name.

However I struggle to with the copyright file /usr/share/doc//copyright:it's a very long file with many filenames and authors sorted by license type, but it contains a lot more than the files I can see in the directory (why?), and at first sight it doesn't contain all the files in the dir (at least when I test with grep).

If the drive also contains more bgs like this then it is copyrighted. To find the owner of the drive, when you click on the drive file name, look to your right, you will see the owner name on a long dialog box when you scroll down.

Simplified takes the hassle out of getting the perfect Background Remover For Copyright images. Upload images in any format and in one click get a high-quality transparent background image ready to be used in all your marketing campaigns, ads, and listings.

Upload your copyright image by dragging and dropping or browsing your drive Click the 'Remove Background' icon in the top toolbar; To export, select PNG, toggle the 'Transparent Background' button on, then click 'Export'. e24fc04721

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