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Copyright refers to the legal right of the owner of intellectual property. In simpler terms, copyright is the right to copy. This means that the original creators of products and anyone they give authorization to are the only ones with the exclusive right to reproduce the work.
The U.S. Copyright Office maintains records of registered works by author and title, some of which may be searched online. More information can be found in the Copyright Office Circular 22 How to Investigate the Copyright Status of a Work, or by calling the Copyright Office at (202) 707-9100.
The word copy write is a common misspelling with no legal meaning. On the other hand, copyright is the correct term and refers to a legal right that protects creative works like books, songs, and software. Additionally, the two terms look similar when written down, which leads people to confuse them.
Everyone is a copyright owner. Once you create an original work and fix it, like taking a photograph, writing a poem or blog, or recording a new song, you are the author and the owner. Companies, organizations, and other people besides the works creator can also be copyright owners.
ing to copyright law, any original content you create and record in a lasting form is your own intellectual property. This means other people cant legally copy your work and pretend its their own. They cant make money from the things you create either.
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Copyright exists automatically in an original work of authorship once it is fixed in a tangible medium, but a copyright owner can take steps to enhance the protections of copyright, the most important of which is registering the work.
Yes, copyright violation can occur even if you dont sell the copyrighted material. Distribution, reproduction, public performance, or the creation of derivative works without permission from the copyright holder is considered infringement, regardless of whether you make money from it or not.
To register a claim to copyright with the U.S. Copyright Office, the claimant must: (1) submit a properly completed application; (2) pay a nonrefundable fee; and (3) deposit the required number of copies of the works to be registered.

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