Thursday, 16 April 2015

Copyright


Copyright

What is copyright?

When copyrights have been applied to something it means it has the exclusive legal right giving to the originator of the subject matter, it can range from print, film and music material. It’s a law that gives you ownership over the things you create.

Copyright rights

When you have ownership over something the copyright law you have both economic and moral rights and the law entitles you with several rights those rights are:

·      The right to reproduce the work
·      To prepare derivative works
·      To distribute copies
·      To preform the work
·      To display the work publicly

Intellectual Property

Intellectual property is either protected automatically from theft or copying, or you can register it to protect it. Just by knowing your rights and having the right type of protection you can help stop people taking or using either the name or products/brands, inventions, the design and looks of your products and the things you write or produce.

Four types of IP Protection
·      Patents
·      Trademarks
·      Designs
·      Copyright

John Tenniel vs. Whittard

John Tenniel was an illustrator in the 19th century, and he created the illustrations for Lewis Carroll’s timeless classic Alice in Wonderland. His illustrations are now being used on Whittard’s Alice in Wonderland range (mugs and teapot collection), The company didn’t buy or able to ask for any rights to use the artwork and it this is a breech of the law, as could be classed as copyright infringement but in fact the copyright law states the ownership of any work only lasts up to 70 years form the end of the calendar year in with the artist had died; for typographical arrangements its only 25 years. After the 70 years are over the work can be used by anyone meaning it was perfectly fine for his illustrations to be used on their products.

Examples of Whittard’s collection:

   


DACS – Design and Artist Copyright Society

DACS is a non-profit visual artists’ rights management organisation that was established by artists for artists. The organisation was founded over 30 years ago and is still continues to campaign for artists rights, adding to their sustained and vital contribution to the creative economy. The idea is to collect and distribute royalties to visual artists and how to do this is through three rights management schemes: Payback, Artists Resale Right and copyright Licensing.

Questions:

How can you protect your work through copyright if it is an automatic right?
 There are four different procedures to help ensure your work is safe:
1.     Ensure your work is properly marked. – State that your work is protected under the Copyright law, and this will restrain infringement. But having copyright notice is not really required as your own work is automatically yours.
2.     Register your work. -  If the ever comes a point when your work is infringed, you have evidence to back up that it actually yours. The copyright registration service provides you with valuable evidence that proves you have ownership of your work.
3.     Keep or register supporting evidence. – There are two types of supporting evidence:
·      Evolution of ideas. – This is evidence of progression/development stages of the work over a period of time.
·      Footprint or watermarking. – This is evidence that is shown on a finished document that will identify the designer in some way.
4.     Agreement between co-authors. – If the work is a joint venture, you should know and understand your rights, what is the percentage in cost and sales you are entitled too, and understand what happens if the other person leaves.

How does copyright affect you?

Copyright gives you the protection and is beneficial to those who produce creative work so it is a vital factor when it comes into the design industry. Due to my course it affects me on a regular basis as I can’t just look and take other artist ideas and designs but I wouldn’t want to do that anyway as I want to be original. But it also means there is a chance other people will actually copy others ideas and maybe it could be one of mine and I wouldn’t like it so I think the copyright law is a very important thing in the design industry as it is so easy to pass work off as your own now, due to things like the internet and social media.   

How can you ensure you don’t infringe on someone else’s copyright?

To ensure you don’t infringe on anybody else’s work, it’s best to not copy anything especially anything on the Internet as it is almost always copyrighted by default. Just be creative and produce my own original work then the will be no violation to the copyright law.




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