4 replies
  • WEB DESIGN
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If someone designs a unique thing for a website where can they go to fully understand how to copyright/trademark/patent this?

Thank You.
#content #copyright
  • Profile picture of the author MadHu5tle
    Depends on the thing. Chances are, whatever it was is not unique enough to warrant a patent. A trademark has to do with a mark to do with trade of goods / services, like a unique business name or image, so probably also not applicable, unless you want to trademark your logo or something. You would register it with the Patent and Trademark office. So a copyright is what you're looking for, in which case most intellectual property is considered copyrighted at the time of creation, there's nothing special you need to do. You can register your copyright with the U.S. copyright office, but it probably isn't worth the time and effort, unless the thing you created was highly valuable and highly desirable.
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  • Profile picture of the author Methodology
    Thank for the answer. If I register it with the US copyright office will that copyright hold worldwide?

    I sent them an email asking for more info.
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  • Profile picture of the author Methodology
    Very disappointed to learn that I cannot copyright an online calculator that I have spend months perfecting. One of my more established competitors can simply take this whenever they want and I lose the competitive advantage.

    Devices and similar articles designed for computing and measuring cannot be
    copyrighted. Common examples of uncopyrightable computing and measuring
    works include slide rulers, wheel dials, and perpetual calendar designs.
    Ideas, methods, systems, mathematical principles, formulas, and equations
    are not copyrightable, and the same is true of devices based on them. Printed
    material on a device--for example, lines, numbers, symbols, and calibrations,
    as well as their arrangement--is likewise not copyrightable, because such material
    is necessarily dictated by an uncopyrightable idea, principle, formula, or
    standard of measurement.
    To be copyrightable, a work must contain a certain minimum amount of
    creative authorship in the form of original literary, artistic, or musical
    expression. A computing or measuring device as such ordinarily contains no
    copyrightable expression. It does not communicate facts or ideas but, instead, is
    a means for arriving at an almost unlimited number of readings or results. To
    the extent that the contents of a device are predetermined by its function, they
    lack creative authorship.

    http://copyright.gov/circs/circ33.pdf
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  • Profile picture of the author nmwf
    That's too bad. But thanks for sharing what you learned.
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