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Works First Published
before 1978
The Copyright Notice
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General Information about the
Copyright Notice |
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In investigating the
copyright status of works first published before January
1, 1978, the most important thing to look for is the
notice of copyright. As a general rule under the
previous law, copyright protection was lost permanently
if the notice was omitted from the first authorized
published edition of a work or if it appeared in the
wrong form or position. The form and position of the
copyright notice for various types of works were
specified in the copyright statute. Some courts were
liberal in overlooking relatively minor departures from
the statutory requirements, but a basic failure to
comply with the notice provisions forfeited copyright
protection and put the work into the public domain in
this country. |
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Absence of Copyright Notice |
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For works first
published before 1978, the complete absence of a
copyright notice from a published copy generally
indicates that the work is not protected by copyright.
For works first published before March 1, 1989, the
copyright notice is mandatory, but omission could have
been cured by registration before or within 5 years of
publication and by adding the notice to copies published
in the United States after discovery of the omission.
Some works may contain a notice, others may not. The
absence of a notice in works published on or after March
1, 1989, does not necessarily indicate that the work is
in the public domain. |
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Sound Recordings |
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Reproductions of
sound recordings usually contain two different types of
creative works: the underlying musical, dramatic, or
literary work that is being performed or read and the
fixation of the actual sounds embodying the performance
or reading. For protection of the underlying musical or
literary work embodied in a recording, it is not
necessary that a copyright notice covering this material
appear on the phonograph records or tapes on which the
recording is reproduced. As noted above, a special
notice is required for protection of the recording of a
series of musical, spoken, or other sounds that were
fixed on or after February 15, 1972. Sound recordings
fixed before February 15, 1972, are not eligible for
federal copyright protection. The Sound Recording Act of
1971, the present copyright law, and the Berne
Convention Implementation Act of 1988 cannot be applied
or be construed to provide any retroactive protection
for sound recordings fixed before February 15, 1972.
Such works, however, may be protected by various state
laws or doctrines of common law. |
The above is taken from circular 22 of the US Copyright Office
entitled "How to investigate the copyright status of a work" and is
not intended as a legal opinion. To read the article in its
entirety, follow the below link:
http://www.loc.gov/copyright/circs/circ22.html#public
The United
States Copyright Office, Library of Congress
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