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What Carl has said is correct, and I would take that option, but if it was a large company which wanted copyright, personally I would go through the Trade Marks Bureau, which costs £70 per annum.
The option for small websites: http://www.copyrightservice.co.uk/co..._copyright_law
The option I would take for a large company: http://www.trademarksbureau.co.uk/copyright.htmlCopyright is an automatic right and arises whenever an individual or company creates a work. To qualify, a work should be regarded as original, and exhibits a degree of labour, skill or judgement
Interpretation is related to the independent creation rather than the idea behind the creation. For example, your idea for a book would not itself be protected, but the actual content of a book you write would be. In other words, someone else is still entitled to write their own book around the same idea, provided they do not directly copy or adapt yours to do so.
Names, titles, short phrases and colours are not generally considered unique or substantial enough to be covered, but a creation, such as a logo, that combines these elements may be.
In short, work that expresses an idea may be protected, but not the idea behind it.
If your website is just a personal website, I wouldn't bother paying £70 per annum, I would stick with the free copyright. The 'free' option isn't the cheap way out of it, every member in the UK is covered as soon as they make their product, but with the Trade Marks Bureau, you are garuntee'd you are covered as they will do extensive research, unlike the 'free' option.We can, for a fee of £70 plus VAT per year, record the material subject to the copyright claim and issue a certificate confirming the date in which the copyright material was initially lodged with us. The registration fee also includes our legal fees should we be required to enter into correspondence with a third party infringing the material subject to the copyright claim.
I hoped this helped, kind regards,
Craig Embleton.
You can actualy do what the Trade Marks Burea are promises for a fraction of the price, put all your files relating to the site on to a disk, then seal it in an envelope and mail it to yourselves via registered post.What Carl has said is correct, and I would take that option, but if it was a large company which wanted copyright, personally I would go through the Trade Marks Bureau, which costs £70 per annum.
The option for small websites: http://www.copyrightservice.co.uk/co..._copyright_law
The option I would take for a large company: http://www.trademarksbureau.co.uk/copyright.html
If your website is just a personal website, I wouldn't bother paying £70 per annum, I would stick with the free copyright. The 'free' option isn't the cheap way out of it, every member in the UK is covered as soon as they make their product, but with the Trade Marks Bureau, you are garuntee'd you are covered as they will do extensive research, unlike the 'free' option.
I hoped this helped, kind regards,
Craig Embleton.
Just dont open it. If there ever a copyright case made against you, the unopened package can be given as evidence in court proving you manufatured the content via the data and information contained. (im not sure if thats entirely clear, but its a workable method if you feel theres that much risk)
With my own site, the bulk of the system resides in a highly developed backend, which isnt accessible of rippable to start with, meaning theres no risk of it being challenged. The front end appearance i dont really care to much about, as its never been anything especaly good to start with :p
A lot of people have copyed us, and I deffo know who they are, I don't mind it but it does take the **** alot..
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