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Kandivali , Mumbai
Copyright refers to the ownership rights to literature, theatre, music, artwork, sound recordings, and other works. Copyright registration grants a set of rights to the work, including reproduction, public communication, adaptation, and translation. Copyright registration ensures that the writers’ rights to ownership and enjoyment of their works are protected and rewarded, which protects and rewards creativity.
Copyright registration is required since it allows you to communicate with the public, reproduce the rights, adapt, and translate the works.
As understanding of intellectual property rules has grown, there has been a significant increase in the amount of intellectual property being registered in India. One of the most important types of intellectual property protection is copyright registration.
The Copyright Act of 1957 governs the process of copyright registration. The author’s creative work cannot be replicated since no one is permitted to use it without the author’s or creator’s consent. The author has the right to charge for the use or modification of their work. The copyright is usually protected for 60 years.
Copyright registration can be obtained for any works related to literature, drama, music, artwork, film, or sound recording. Copyrights are given to mainly three classes of work, and each class has its distinctive right under the copyright act.
The creators enjoy legal protection when their work is reproduced without authorization. Registering a Copyright makes it much easier to protect the original work against infringement.
Copyright registration creates a public record of the work, and proof of ownership is established for the creative work.
The owner of registered copyright gets the rights to reproduce, disseminate and adapt and translate the work.
Copyright registration applications can be submitted on Form IV along with the required fees. It can be copyrighted whether it is a published or unpublished work. Three copies of published material must be supplied with the application for published work.
For unpublished work, a copy of the manuscript must be supplied with the application for affixing the copyright office’s stamp, which serves as proof that the work has been registered.
The process for Copyright Registration:
Copyright protection usually lasts for 60 years. The 60-year period begins with the author’s death year in the case of original literary, theatrical, musical, and artistic works.
The 60 years is counted from the publication date in the case of cinematographic films, sound recordings, pictures, posthumous publications, anonymous and pseudonymous publications, works of government, and activity of international organisations.
Infringement against the copyright of any work is a crime punishable under Section 63 of the Copyright Act. Six months in prison and a fine of Rs. 50,000 are possible penalties.
Also, if a copyright violation has occurred or is likely to occur, any police officer not below the rank of sub-inspector may, if satisfied, take all copies of the work and the plates used to make infringing copies of work without a warrant.
There is a possibility that the registrar will raise objections to the copyright application during the registration procedure. An objection may arise for a variety of reasons, including application similarities and the existence of similar work. Copyright objections can be raised up to 30 days after the copyright application is filed.
If any objections arise after a thorough assessment of the application, the registrar tells the applicant and requests clarifications. It is critical to respond to the copyright objection letter because it is a legal requirement. If no response is received, the registrar may terminate the copyright application, which is then amended in the copyright journal as “rejected.”
To avoid such outcomes, it is critical to reply to the copyright objection in order to obtain and maintain the work’s legal rights.
As a legal letter, replying to a copyright objection letter necessitates legal understanding and drafting skills. There is no fixed format to draft a response to copyright objection letter.
Copyright registration grants exclusive rights to the copyright owner. An individual cannot make copies or reproduce work without the permission of the copyright owner.
The Act allows the creator to use his piece of work the way he wants to use it. He can create any derivatives of his original work. He can also use a different format based on his existing creation.
The owner can broadcast their original work to the public. The copyright owner can use visual signs or even images.
The owners of artistic and musical work can perform their works in public. A musician can play his piece of music for the people. An artist can perform in public or any platform the artist wishes to.
The producers of original work are endowed with moral and ethical rights. The right of attribution, often known as paternity, means that the artist can claim sole authorship of his work.
The right of integrity empowers the owner to sue the individuals for damages. If someone attempts to mutilate, change, or distort the original work, the copyright holder can sue for damages.
The Copyright Act allows the owner to distribute his work in whatever form he likes. If he wishes, he can also transfer certain rights to another person to use the copyright.
Under some circumstances, the legislation permits the use of a registered work for research, study, critique, review, and news reporting without the owner’s permission, as well as the use of works in libraries, schools, and legislatures. Some exclusions have been prescribed in respect of specific uses of copyrighted works to protect users’ interests. The usage of the work is one of the exemptions.
Trademark | Patent | Copyright | |
---|---|---|---|
What’s protected | Any word, phrase, symbol or design that recognizes and differentiates the source of one party's goods from those of another. | Inventions, such as procedure, manufacturer, composition, machines of matter as well as improvements to these. | Books, articles, music, photography, sculptures, dances, sound recordings, motion films and other original works of authorship. |
Requirements for protection | A mark must be distinguishable, in the sense that it must be able to identify the source of a certain good. | A fresh, valuable, and unusual invention is required. | A work must be unique, original, and created in a tangible manner. |
Term of protection | As long as the mark is used in commerce. | 20 years | Author’s life span+ 70 years. |
Rights Granted | Right to use the mark and to prohibit others from using identical marks in a way that could create confusion about the goods or services' origin. | Right to restrict others from manufacturing, selling, or importing the patented invention. | Copyrighted works have the power to dictate their reproduction, creative works, circulation, public performance, and display. |