My record label isnt necessarily going to be a company, it will be a free label but i still dont want anyone else using the name so would like to copyright it, anyone know a good place to do this?
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My record label isnt necessarily going to be a company, it will be a free label but i still dont want anyone else using the name so would like to copyright it, anyone know a good place to do this?
I dunno if this will work, but it does for graphic designers when ever you do work. © all of the work and sign and date it. then send it registered post to yourself, but dont open the package.
Bobs your uncle if anyone else rips you off you can take them to court, have the mail ready open it in front of everyone. and pow job done.
just make sure you put a © and date it.
take me on my holidays
You need to register it as a trademark I think.
http://www.companyregistrations.co.u...gistration.asp
I was told that, and I do believe it's all above board.Originally Posted by soma
I think the "post it to yourself" route is only good for materials though - music, art etc
No good for a name. You can't write the name on a bit of paper and post it to yourself.
Name's need to be registered, then when and if you start trading its your registered property, and nobody else can use it. Costs though, sadly.
that only applies in america, in the uk you have instant copyright over anything you make or create or think of.Originally Posted by soma
it works, its a poor mans patent. it goes to proving that you thought of the name first.Originally Posted by Si the Sigh
Bás Ar An Impireacht
While this will help, it would never stand up in a court of law unless it's held by your lawyer or in a bank vault - the basic problem with this is that you've sent it to yourself and could at any point have changed the contents, ask any good lawyer. It's a bit of an Urban Myth....Originally Posted by soma
m
Just to back up martin there.
Some banks offer deposit boxes to their customers for a fee or even for free... its best to check.
And as for the lawyer comment... spot on, "All lawyers are liars.. i am a lawyer"
Cunts.
Haha It sad but true fella ;)
i think if you release the tracks and you are the first to use that name for a label (which can be easaly checked at www.discogs.com)and the tracks have been presented to an organisation which protects the rights of musicians (like buma/stemra in Holland) you are pretty much covered i imagine
or you could register the brand name at the Chamber of Commerce
A small part of my course when at university was how to handle yourself while freelancing and this is what we were advised to do to stop people stealing ideas and work from you.Originally Posted by Martin Dust
It reckon it doesn't hurt to do for a mere £4.00 registered post.
:)
take me on my holidays
You may as well buy a couple of pints because it's bad advice and isn't proof at all, unless it's held by an "official body"...Originally Posted by soma
The "mail to yourself method" is a hoax. DO NOT PAY ATTENTION TO IT. I really wish it would die already. Problem is, it sounds logical. But, it's not accepted in courts of law.
As for the label name protection, you want a "trademark" not a copyright.
A person belonging to one or more Order is just as likely to carry a flag of the counter-establishment as the flag of the establishment, just as long as it is a flag. --P.D.
easy. just look up copyright and trademark on Wikipedia
basics is u need to Trademark a name and copyright the music in accordance to each market you want protection.
This method dose work in the UK, iv just done a course in music business. the posting method tends to really only work with music that has been put onto a fixated format but its also another form of proof if you send it to your self.Originally Posted by tocsin
my advice is to:
1. If you want to protect your own material as intellectual property you must first put your material into a fixated form, meaning that it has to be recorded onto type/CD or written onto paper, then the material has to be sent to the songwriters/creators house recorded delivery and stored in a safe place. By sending the material recorded delivery back to your own address means that you now have proof of the time and date of when that material was first made. Its also good to have afew witness's but make sure there not the type who are going to nick your idea.
2. Then i would register it as a trademark
http://www.patent.gov.uk/tm/howtoapply/index.htm
that site should help you out.
hope this helps ya ;)
Who's teaching people this kind of rubbish, it doesn't work and never, ever has - for the last time :) it's bullshit and about as safe as putting money under your bed...Originally Posted by Ms.Rhythm
OK, but have you actually successfully proven in a UK court that you own the copyright on something by this method?Originally Posted by Ms.Rhythm
If you haven't then your opinion and anything you learned on a course is hearsay.
Show some legal precedent.
Some actual information: http://www.snopes.com/legal/postmark.asp
So, basically, it is admissable as evidence but far from conclusive.However, the U.K. Patent Office has this to say on the subject in its "Claiming and Enforcing Copyright" FAQ:
How can I prove originality in my work?
Ultimately this is a matter for the courts to decide. However, it may help copyright owners to deposit a copy of their work with a bank or solicitor or send a copy of their work to themselves by special delivery (which gives a clear date stamp on the envelope), leaving the envelope unopened on its return; this could establish that the work existed at this time. (Further details of special delivery should be available at Post Offices).
Careful readers will have noted the "may help" and "could establish" in the above entry.
Sending it to a solicitor or depositing in a safety deposit box is better.
Ultimately the best protection is registering the copyright with PRS / MCPS or whatever it is.
This will cost you though - but then again, as they say oop north, you don't get owt for nowt.