Actual for You
#1 in Business Subscribe Email Print

You are here: Home > Legal > Legal > Protecting and Prosecuting Your Images

Tags

  • reserved
  • sleepless
  • blogs
  • owners agent
  • rights reserved
  • employee hired

  • Links

  • How to Write an Article Part III
  • How To Outline A Sermon
  • Trusting Your Physics Instructor
  • Actual for You - Protecting and Prosecuting Your Images

    3 Most Expensive Mistakes People Make With Their Car Loan
    Most people cannot afford to buy a new vehicle without taking out a car loan. Though car loans can be an excellent source of financing, these loans should not be taken lightly. Any mistakes that are made with your car loan could damage your credit score and prevent you from obtaining loans or credit in the future. Below is a list of the three most common, and most expensive, car loan mistakes.Mistake One: Choosing the Wrong LenderThe lending industry is an extremely competitive market. Banks, credit unions, online lenders, and other financing companies are all competing for your business. This is very good news for you, because it gives you many different options to choose from. Before making a decision, shop around and consider factors, such as interest rates, lending fees, and loan terms and conditions.Mistake Two: Borro
    y want the society to give you proper credit. If so, write the society a letter officially giving it the right to use the image (be sure to designate the parameters of that use), but insist that you get a photo credit with a copyright notice. Also ask the society to add your website name. You may get additional work from the society or others.

    Thanks to the Digital Millennium Copyright Act enacted in 1998, you have another option when your copyright is infringed on the web. While the Internet Service Provider [“ISP”] is not liable for transmitting information that infringes a copyright, the ISP must remove the infringing materials from a user’s website after receiving proper notice of the violation. The notice must: be in writing, be signed by the copyright owner or the owner’s agent, identify the copyrighted work claimed to be infringed (or list of infringements from the same site) and identify the material that is infringing the work.

    Additionally, the notice must include the complaining party’s contact

    Advertising Inside Video Games - A Good Corporate Move Indeed
    Many people complain that Video and Computer Games are way too violent and that is unfortunate for parents who wish to teach their kids better table manners and to be good in school, which they lack and are not even close. But, perhaps Corporations might be able to help turn the tide. How so you ask?Well consider if you will that Advertising inside Video Games is a good corporate move and in doing so a company like Ford, Pepsi, Starbucks or Wal-Mart might be able to have a little say in the violence levels. Game Makers might need to tone it down a few notches in order to get the Corporate Advertisers and therefore the games can allow free-markets a little self-regulation, rather than allowing government intervention and more rules and regulations from various agencies.If the next generation sees corporate logos and images in their video ga
    You’re sitting in your easy chair and surfing the web. You’re not paying much attention, until you see it. It’s your photo, but you did not post it there. You can’t believe they used your photo without your permission.

    Do you care? Maybe your photo is being used by a family to decorate its news page. Maybe it’s being used to sell a product. Does that make a difference to you?

    If the answer to both questions is no, then read no further. If the answer is yes to one or both, then pay attention.

    Creating and Owning Your Copyright

    A copyright is created at the moment the work is made into a fixed form. For photographers, it happens at the click of the shutter. The image then is protected by a copyright regardless of whether it is recorded on film or digitally. Copyrights give the owner the exclusive right to do, or to authorize others to do, specific things to the property. Specifically, the copyright owner has complete control to reproduce the image, to prepare derivative works based on the image, to distribute them by sale, rental or lending, and/or to display the image.

    The photographer who clicks the shutter owns the copyright. The only exception to this rule is when you shoot the image in a work-for-hire condition. This relationship is created only in two situations: (1) when you are an employee hired to photograph for your employer, such as a photojournalist who is an employee of a newspaper; or (2) you are hired to photograph pursuant to a contract, and the contract specifically includes the provision that the copyrights to the images you shoot for the contractor belong to the contractor.

    You own the copyright even if you don’t register it. Registration does not give you the copyright. The copyright is established when you take the photograph. Registration is only a legal formality that gives you certain additional rights.

    You can only transfer your copyright in writing. Giving a slide to a publisher, giving digital files to a client or selling a print does not transfer the copyright. While these acts grant what is called “non-exclusive rights,” you still own the copyright to the image. The transfer must be specifically described in writing and it must be signed by the copyright owner.

    Protecting Your Copyright

    When you own a copyright, there are things you can do to protect your rights. The copyright notice – the “©” with a date and name of the copyright owner – is not required for protection, but it may help to guard your images. It may stop someone from copying your image, either because the person will be reminded that the image belongs to someone else or because your notice impairs the image for the person’s use. Also, it helps to include a copyright notice with your image because if it is stolen, the defendant is prevented from using the defense of innocent infringement.

    Your image does not have to be registered with the U.S. Copyright Office for you to use the notice. You also can include the words “all rights reserved” for some international protection.

    Registering your copyright with the U.S. Copyright Office is required to file suit against an infringer. Registration provides other advantages, as well. These include: establishing a public record of the copyright; establishing evidence of copyright ownership if registered within five years of publication; providing for statutory damages and attorney’s fees if registered before or within three months of infringement; and preventing the importation of infringing copies. You have more rights if the image was registered prior to infringement; but register it anyway, even if it is after the violation.

    To make the registration process easier, bulk register both your unpublished and published images (separate bulks; not together).

    Prosecuting Your Copyright

    When your image is used without your permission, your copyright is infringed. You have several options at this point.

    You always have the option of doing nothing. You may not care that the non-profit wolf society is using one of your wolf images. You may only want the society to give you proper credit. If so, write the society a letter officially giving it the right to use the image (be sure to designate the parameters of that use), but insist that you get a photo credit with a copyright notice. Also ask the society to add your website name. You may get additional work from the society or others.

    Thanks to the Digital Millennium Copyright Act enacted in 1998, you have another option when your copyright is infringed on the web. While the Internet Service Provider [“ISP”] is not liable for transmitting information that infringes a copyright, the ISP must remove the infringing materials from a user’s website after receiving proper notice of the violation. The notice must: be in writing, be signed by the copyright owner or the owner’s agent, identify the copyrighted work claimed to be infringed (or list of infringements from the same site) and identify the material that is infringing the work.

    Additionally, the notice must include the complaining party’s contact

    Five Steps To Successful Web Marketing And Sales Process!
    The basic principles used successfully by brick and mortar storefronts in moving your potential clients through a successful sales process is also the most effective way on the web.But how?You do this by following the five step process in your marketing strategy by attracting potential clients, building trust, helping them choose the right product, presenting the product, and then closing the sale.Step One- Marketing / prospecting:Prospecting is the delivery of qualified visitors to your website. It can be achieved by many forms, such as, search engine marketing, pay-per-clicks, and e-mail advertising that draw people to your site.Once they are there, it's your responsibility to show them how your product can fill the void in the marketplace and what sets your product apart from the rest. Deliver your 'Unique Selling P
    to distribute them by sale, rental or lending, and/or to display the image.

    The photographer who clicks the shutter owns the copyright. The only exception to this rule is when you shoot the image in a work-for-hire condition. This relationship is created only in two situations: (1) when you are an employee hired to photograph for your employer, such as a photojournalist who is an employee of a newspaper; or (2) you are hired to photograph pursuant to a contract, and the contract specifically includes the provision that the copyrights to the images you shoot for the contractor belong to the contractor.

    You own the copyright even if you don’t register it. Registration does not give you the copyright. The copyright is established when you take the photograph. Registration is only a legal formality that gives you certain additional rights.

    You can only transfer your copyright in writing. Giving a slide to a publisher, giving digital files to a client or selling a print does not transfer the copyright. While these acts grant what is called “non-exclusive rights,” you still own the copyright to the image. The transfer must be specifically described in writing and it must be signed by the copyright owner.

    Protecting Your Copyright

    When you own a copyright, there are things you can do to protect your rights. The copyright notice – the “©” with a date and name of the copyright owner – is not required for protection, but it may help to guard your images. It may stop someone from copying your image, either because the person will be reminded that the image belongs to someone else or because your notice impairs the image for the person’s use. Also, it helps to include a copyright notice with your image because if it is stolen, the defendant is prevented from using the defense of innocent infringement.

    Your image does not have to be registered with the U.S. Copyright Office for you to use the notice. You also can include the words “all rights reserved” for some international protection.

    Registering your copyright with the U.S. Copyright Office is required to file suit against an infringer. Registration provides other advantages, as well. These include: establishing a public record of the copyright; establishing evidence of copyright ownership if registered within five years of publication; providing for statutory damages and attorney’s fees if registered before or within three months of infringement; and preventing the importation of infringing copies. You have more rights if the image was registered prior to infringement; but register it anyway, even if it is after the violation.

    To make the registration process easier, bulk register both your unpublished and published images (separate bulks; not together).

    Prosecuting Your Copyright

    When your image is used without your permission, your copyright is infringed. You have several options at this point.

    You always have the option of doing nothing. You may not care that the non-profit wolf society is using one of your wolf images. You may only want the society to give you proper credit. If so, write the society a letter officially giving it the right to use the image (be sure to designate the parameters of that use), but insist that you get a photo credit with a copyright notice. Also ask the society to add your website name. You may get additional work from the society or others.

    Thanks to the Digital Millennium Copyright Act enacted in 1998, you have another option when your copyright is infringed on the web. While the Internet Service Provider [“ISP”] is not liable for transmitting information that infringes a copyright, the ISP must remove the infringing materials from a user’s website after receiving proper notice of the violation. The notice must: be in writing, be signed by the copyright owner or the owner’s agent, identify the copyrighted work claimed to be infringed (or list of infringements from the same site) and identify the material that is infringing the work.

    Additionally, the notice must include the complaining party’s contact

    Are You Having Sleepless Nights Because of Your Finances?
    You’ve worked hard all day and come home at night, only to discover that you can’t get comfortable in your own bed. You toss and you turn for well over three hours. As 3a.m. approaches, you finally go to sleep but the alarm sounds all too quickly at 6 a.m. It’s time for you to go to work. Day two comes and you’re off again to the usual rat race. You repeat the same pattern once you get home. Later that night you lay in bed, thinking how you’re going to pay all of these bills. Despite your best efforts on the job, including overtime, it doesn’t seem to be enough. What can you do? Who can you to turn to?Does this sound like you? Are you a Christian having sleepless nights because of your finances? Here are the top five reasons I have found why people get into debt:1) Try to live beyond their means. Keep up with the Joneses.2)
    While these acts grant what is called “non-exclusive rights,” you still own the copyright to the image. The transfer must be specifically described in writing and it must be signed by the copyright owner.

    Protecting Your Copyright

    When you own a copyright, there are things you can do to protect your rights. The copyright notice – the “©” with a date and name of the copyright owner – is not required for protection, but it may help to guard your images. It may stop someone from copying your image, either because the person will be reminded that the image belongs to someone else or because your notice impairs the image for the person’s use. Also, it helps to include a copyright notice with your image because if it is stolen, the defendant is prevented from using the defense of innocent infringement.

    Your image does not have to be registered with the U.S. Copyright Office for you to use the notice. You also can include the words “all rights reserved” for some international protection.

    Registering your copyright with the U.S. Copyright Office is required to file suit against an infringer. Registration provides other advantages, as well. These include: establishing a public record of the copyright; establishing evidence of copyright ownership if registered within five years of publication; providing for statutory damages and attorney’s fees if registered before or within three months of infringement; and preventing the importation of infringing copies. You have more rights if the image was registered prior to infringement; but register it anyway, even if it is after the violation.

    To make the registration process easier, bulk register both your unpublished and published images (separate bulks; not together).

    Prosecuting Your Copyright

    When your image is used without your permission, your copyright is infringed. You have several options at this point.

    You always have the option of doing nothing. You may not care that the non-profit wolf society is using one of your wolf images. You may only want the society to give you proper credit. If so, write the society a letter officially giving it the right to use the image (be sure to designate the parameters of that use), but insist that you get a photo credit with a copyright notice. Also ask the society to add your website name. You may get additional work from the society or others.

    Thanks to the Digital Millennium Copyright Act enacted in 1998, you have another option when your copyright is infringed on the web. While the Internet Service Provider [“ISP”] is not liable for transmitting information that infringes a copyright, the ISP must remove the infringing materials from a user’s website after receiving proper notice of the violation. The notice must: be in writing, be signed by the copyright owner or the owner’s agent, identify the copyrighted work claimed to be infringed (or list of infringements from the same site) and identify the material that is infringing the work.

    Additionally, the notice must include the complaining party’s contact

    Know Your Rights and Limitations When You Fly
    The Transportation Security Administration’s (“TSA”) mission is to “protect [ ] the Nation’s transportation systems to ensure freedom of movement for people and commerce.” The TSA, not the airlines, determines what can pass through the secured area of an airport.So it’s great that the TSA allows photographers an extra bag of “photographic equipment in addition to one (1) carry-on and one (1) personal item through the screening checkpoint. The additional bag must conform to your air carrier’s carry-on restrictions for size and weight.” The guideline can be found here: http://www.tsa.gov/public/display?content=090005198006b11cThe catch is that your airline, not the TSA, has the right to disallow the third bag. While you can get it through security, you may be forced to check it at the gate. Since many photographers need two bags for photogra
    our copyright with the U.S. Copyright Office is required to file suit against an infringer. Registration provides other advantages, as well. These include: establishing a public record of the copyright; establishing evidence of copyright ownership if registered within five years of publication; providing for statutory damages and attorney’s fees if registered before or within three months of infringement; and preventing the importation of infringing copies. You have more rights if the image was registered prior to infringement; but register it anyway, even if it is after the violation.

    To make the registration process easier, bulk register both your unpublished and published images (separate bulks; not together).

    Prosecuting Your Copyright

    When your image is used without your permission, your copyright is infringed. You have several options at this point.

    You always have the option of doing nothing. You may not care that the non-profit wolf society is using one of your wolf images. You may only want the society to give you proper credit. If so, write the society a letter officially giving it the right to use the image (be sure to designate the parameters of that use), but insist that you get a photo credit with a copyright notice. Also ask the society to add your website name. You may get additional work from the society or others.

    Thanks to the Digital Millennium Copyright Act enacted in 1998, you have another option when your copyright is infringed on the web. While the Internet Service Provider [“ISP”] is not liable for transmitting information that infringes a copyright, the ISP must remove the infringing materials from a user’s website after receiving proper notice of the violation. The notice must: be in writing, be signed by the copyright owner or the owner’s agent, identify the copyrighted work claimed to be infringed (or list of infringements from the same site) and identify the material that is infringing the work.

    Additionally, the notice must include the complaining party’s contact

    Defining the Relations Between Blogs, E-zines, RSS, and E-mail
    Although RSS and blogs are slowly reaching mainstream, they are still missuderstood by most marketers in relation to eachother and in relation to their relatives, e-zines and e-mail. How do these four really relate and what does this mean for your internet marketing strategy?The most common missconception is comparing blogs and e-mail, with many bloggers actually touting blogs as a replacement for e-mail. The truth is, there’s no comparison at all, just like comparing apples and oranges.The second missconception is believing that RSS and blogs are somehow strongly related or even that RSS is good only for delivering blog content. The result of this on one side are marketers who do not see RSS as a full-powered communicational channel, and bloggers on the other side who refuse to see e-mail as a viable content delivery vehicle.Let’s
    y want the society to give you proper credit. If so, write the society a letter officially giving it the right to use the image (be sure to designate the parameters of that use), but insist that you get a photo credit with a copyright notice. Also ask the society to add your website name. You may get additional work from the society or others.

    Thanks to the Digital Millennium Copyright Act enacted in 1998, you have another option when your copyright is infringed on the web. While the Internet Service Provider [“ISP”] is not liable for transmitting information that infringes a copyright, the ISP must remove the infringing materials from a user’s website after receiving proper notice of the violation. The notice must: be in writing, be signed by the copyright owner or the owner’s agent, identify the copyrighted work claimed to be infringed (or list of infringements from the same site) and identify the material that is infringing the work.

    Additionally, the notice must include the complaining party’s contact information, a statement that the complaint is made in “good faith,” and a statement, under penalty of perjury, that the information contained in the notification is accurate and that the complainer has the right to proceed (because he is the copyright owner or agent). Because the notification requirements must be strictly followed, legal assistance can help to make the claim.

    Your most aggressive option is to pursue your legal remedies by filing suit. Remember, your copyright must have been registered with the Copyright Office. To file suit, get an attorney to help you because the legal procedures are complicated.

    Usually, your most profitable and easiest road is the middle one. Since you have your proof of registration, you need only to contact the infringer to put him on notice. If the infringer is a business-savvy person, he will know that he’s in trouble. If he doesn’t understand the trouble he’s in, he will as soon as he counsels with his attorney. He will want to avoid the legal fees that will be imposed both by his and your attorney. So make your demand for statutory damages by letter and you will get your just rewards much more quickly.

    The weight of your demand letter is dramatically increased if it comes from an attorney. The infringer will recognize that you mean business and are prepared to go forward with suit if the infringer doesn’t respond appropriately.

    It’s a Two-Step Process

    Protecting and prosecuting your images go hand-in-hand. If you don’t protect them, you can’t prosecute them. If you don’t prosecute them, then infringers will continue to take advantage of artists, and soon you won’t be able to protect your images.

    Take my advice; get professional help.

    PhotoAttorney

    HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
    <a href="http://www.actual4u.com/article/129257/actual4u-Protecting-and-Prosecuting-Your-Images.html">Protecting and Prosecuting Your Images</a>

    BB link (for phorums):
    [url=http://www.actual4u.com/article/129257/actual4u-Protecting-and-Prosecuting-Your-Images.html]Protecting and Prosecuting Your Images[/url]

    Related Articles:

    Develop Your Small Business - Five Tasks A Day

    Wanna Start a Successful Affiliate Marketing Business and Earn Residual Income For the Rest of Your

    Blogging - Everyone Else Is Doing It - So Why Can't I

    Bookmark it: del.icio.us digg.com reddit.com netvouz.com google.com yahoo.com technorati.com furl.net bloglines.com socialdust.com ma.gnolia.com newsvine.com slashdot.org simpy.com shadows.com blinklist.com