
Content Rights for Creative Professionals
Copyrights & Trademarks in a Digital Age
- 304 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
About this book
Content Rights for Creative Professionals is for professionals and students working in all areas of media (film/video, photography, multimedia, web, graphics, and broadcast) who need to know what the law requires and how they should properly utilize copyrights and trademarks. This book outlines critical concepts and applies them with explanations in real-life applications, including many cases from the author's own practice as well as those of various media professionals.
This 256 page text is a practical guide designed to provide its reader with a firm understanding of the principles underlying the ownership and use of content, so that when questions arise, they will be able to make correct, well-informed decisions-whether concerning their personal works, or works of others that a company wishes to copyright or trademark. In addition, the reader will be more capable of exercising sound judgment in structuring employment and contract relationships and of acquiring and/or licensing works, which are at the core of the business of communicating.
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Information
Part One
Copyright
Chapter 1
Overview of Copyright: The Big Picture
- Defines a copyrighted work and what is meant by exclusive rights in that work.
- Sets forth a term of years during which the author can commercially exploit the copyrighted work.
- Governs the ways in which copyrighted works are owned and can be transferred.
- Provides penalties for those who would take an authorâs copyrighted work without permission.
- Establishes limited exceptions so that important public policies can be advanced.
Setting the Stage
- A radio manager has had a long-running dispute with Arbitron (ARB), one of the leading firms that rate the popularity of programs. ARB measures audiences for radio programs and issues reports. Then, radio stations rely on the data to price the value of their air time for advertisers. But our radio manager felt his station consistently paid a kingâs ransom price for the diary numbers. Fed up, he decides not to renew the ARB contract. As luck would have it, when the very next ARB report is released, his station is credited with moving up five slots and is top rated in drive time (the prime time for radio, when most people drive to or from work). He obtains a copy of the diary report from his ad agency and highlights of the market numbers are printed in âthe trades,â specialized magazines that cater to radio and advertising executives. Determined to make a splash, his sales department prepares a chart based on the report, comparing the stationâs ARB ratings data with all competitors. The report is sent to 300 advertisers in the market. When ARBâs representative calls to complain, the red-faced manager asks his staff, âAny problem?â
- A drama is caught on videotape by a viewerâpolice beating a drunk-driving suspect. The viewer calls a television stationâs âhotline,â and a reporter picks up the videotape. It is played on the noon news, and by nightfall, the network is clamoring for copy. The station sends it on, asking for on-air credit with its logo on-screen at all times. When the viewer who made the tape sees his video on national television, at first he is thrilled, then he gets angry: Who gave them permission, and whereâs my credit? He calls his brother, âthe lawyer,â who contacts the station demanding big compensation. Does the viewer have a claim?
- A Tennessee television stationâs fall campaign has a VOLUNTEER theme. Every week for one year, the station produces five-minute pieces on the wonders of the state, from the statehouse to the mountain peaks. The series, which captures the native beauty of the countryside and the warmth of its residents, is scored with inspiring music from the Capitol Symphony Orchestra. The series is greeted with such acclaim that the station executives decided to market it commercially. They invest about $30,000 creating a two-hour video and release 5,000 copies to local chain stores. Their plans hit a snag when the Capitol Symphony Orchestra and agents of the composers contact the station. Is there exposure here?
- Thanks to a provision of the Cable Television Consumer Protection and Competition Act of 1992 called retransmission consent, television broadcast stations can negotiate a deal with the local cable system for carriage. Instead of having their signals carried for free (as had been the case for 15 years), the stations can now say to the local cable system_ carry my local channel only if you pay a fee or give me extra local access. Many stations receive local access in the form of a cable channel that they can program with a mix of local news and sports. With the popularity of regional sports networks, one station manager decides to capitalize on the wealth of local sports and blend it with a mix of highlights pulled from regional cable channels. While camera crews go to high school and college fields taping games, station engineers edit video feeds pulled from other cable channels down to two-minute summaries. The station also hires former local sports stars to simulate play by plays by reading box scores from daily newspapers. How does this plan sound?
- A rival television station has the News Story of the Year breaking in its studio. A gunman, berserk but photogenic, storms into Channel 5âs studio with a loaded rifle. He demands air time. The station executives have little choice but to oblige. What unfolds for the next hour is compelling, personal, and live TV. The gunman rants against his family, his city, his boss, his mindless life. Every television viewer in the market is riveted on the story. All the competitive stations can do is set their VCRs in motion, capture the drama, and wait for it to end. The conclusion is sad and horrifyingâthe gunman shoots himself before startled onlookers. Instantly, the story is transformed into national news. When an arch competitor asks permission to air its off-air tape of the events, Channel 5âs news director refuses. Spurned but insistent, the rival station leads its 6:00 p.m. newscast with the footage it taped off the air. Even after receiving a threatening call from Channel 5, the footage tops the 11:00 p.m. evening newscast. The next day, a lawyerâs letter arrives. Concerned?
- Breaking out of the crowded Internet pack requires creativity. One local phone company has a surefire campaign. It will build Web home pages for all its customers and pick the âSweet 7â each week, creating hotkeys for quick access to them. The home pages are creative and informative. Some enterprising subscribers placed newly released CDs by top recording artists on their websites. Others pick photos from Time and Newsweek and give them new captions, while still others scan in chapters from best-sellers and rewrite the endings. The campaign proves instantly popular and subscriptions soar. The telcoâs Internet Access Group is sky high until it receives a letter from a publisher threatening a multimillion-dollar copyright claim. What gives?
- George Lucas announced he would do it again! Star Wars: The Phantom Menace, the first episode in his Star Wars saga to be released in almost 20 years, hit the theaters with more ballyhoo than any film in a generation. However, between the release of Return of the Jedi in 1983 and this episode, the Internet craze and digital communications hit high gear. With computers more sophisticated than the ones that helped land a man on the moon sitting in every teenagerâs home, Lucas and his film company are concerned that the new Star Wars movie would be pirated and shared around the world. To beat the pirates to the punch, Lucasfilms launches an attack, not directly against known infringers but against the unidentified thieves. They do so by advising online service providers (OSPs), the Internet middlemen (including many colleges whose students log onto the Internet via school servers), that a copyright menaceâpirated versions of the filmâis about to be unleashed. Every OSP, they warn, has an obligation under the new DMCA to search websites for infringing copies of the movie. Does the Lucasfilm effort make the grade?
- The Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) is intent on cutting down what it views as the 20th century version of the black plague, the seemingly uncontrolled copying of digital sounds. Despite creation of a technical system nicknamed CSS, a program that scrambles digital codes to hinder copying, a teenager from Norway devised a computer program to defeat the scrambling system. Dubbed DeCSS, the program becomes a popular rallying point for hackers and others outraged by the high price of CDs and feeling challenged by RIAAâs aggressive campaign to shut down unauthorized copying of musical CDs. When a Princeton professor wants to give a talk about the DeCSS program, RIAA threatens reprisals. To RIAAâs surprise, the professor sues, defending his First Amendment right to speak his mind. RIAA counters that it is just kiddingâalthough it is intent on shutting down DeCSS, it has no gripe with the learned professor. Is this a real dispute?
- The death of George Harrison of the Beatles is a sad reminder that the freewheeling days of the 1960s are long since gone. Stories about the events in his life made the headlines fall and winter of 2001. One of the more curious events was the retelling of a copyright infringement tale that Harrison inadvertently experienced. It seems that the melody of one of his most popular songs, âMy Sweet Lord,â too closely parallels the tune of âHeâs So Fine,â a 1963 hit by the Chiffons. But Harrison neither intended to copy the prior work nor was aware that he was doing it. Should that have been the basis for a legal complaint?

Chapter 2
What is Copyright?
Fixation
Original and Creative Expression
Table of contents
- Cover Page
- Table Of Contents
- Content Rights for Creative Professionals
- Part One Copyright
- Part Two Trademarks
- Part Three Collateral Concerns: Things You Cannot Ignore
- Part Four Content Rights: The Media and Film
- Part Five Content and New Media: The Internet Has Arrived
- Glossary
- Index