Copyright
protects original works of authorship, including the text, graphics,
photographs, sound recordings and audiovisual elements of websites and their
underlying computer programs. To be copyrightable, website material must meet
two criteria:
1.It must be an
original work of authorship. It must originate with the copyright owner and
show some minimal amount of creativity. You cannot copyright a domain name or
the title of a website.
2.It must be
fixed in some sort of tangible medium that allows it to be perceived,
reproduced or otherwise communicated. This includes computers and digital
media. You cannot copyright ideas, procedures, systems or methods of operation.
Who Owns the Copyright to Your Website?
A website is
often a compilation of things – text, graphics, photographs, video and computer
programs – created by several people. You only own the copyright to the parts
of a website that you created, unless copyrights to the other parts have been
transferred to you.
If the website
was created by your employees as part of their regular job, you will own the
copyright.
If you hire
someone to create a website for your business, the person you hired owns the
copyright to whatever they created. If you want to own the copyright to all of
the copyrightable portions of your business website, you will need work for
hire agreements or agreements transferring the copyrightable content to you. An
attorney can assist you with this.
Similarly, if
you are a website designer, you own the copyright to the copyrightable portions
of your designs and content, unless you have signed a written agreement
transferring those rights to someone else.
Why Should You Register a Copyright?
There are
several advantages to registering your copyright with the Vietnam Copyright Office.
These advantages include:
Registration
serves as a public record of your copyright ownership.
You cannot sue
someone for copyright infringement unless you have registered your copyright.
If you register
your copyright within three months of publication or before an infringement
occurs, you can recover statutory damages and attorneys fees if you win a
copyright infringement lawsuit. Statutory damages are awarded for each work
infringed and do not require you to prove your monetary loss or the infringer’s
gain.
Special Rules for Website Copyright
Registration
A copyright registration only covers the copyrightable elements of your website that you
identify and submit to the copyright office as part of your registration.
Updates to
websites must be registered separately unless they fall within limited
exceptions for automatic updates and serials. Details about these exceptions
can be found on the copyright office website.
If you
developed a computer program, such as an html program, that establishes the
format of text and graphics when a website is viewed on a computer screen, you
can register a copyright in the computer program, but the registration will not
cover the content of the website.
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