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What can be registered |
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Copyright literally means the right to produce any work exclusively. The right granted by the Government would prohibit all other persons from reproducing the work without a licence or permission from the author of the work. Thus the Act provides a negative right by prohibiting others from copying the work. |
What can be Registered as Copyright
According to the provisions of the Act, a copyright subsists in following types of works:
I. OriginalLabels used in respect of products marketed by the Company qualify for registration under Copyright Act as Artistic Work.
However to qualify for copyright protection the artistic work must be original. It means it should not have been prior to the date of publication, published in India.
The term of copyright where the author is a company is 50 years from the years of publication. Here publication means issue of copies of the work either in whole or in part to the public in a manner sufficient to satisfy the reasonable requirements of the public having regard to the nature of the work.
The first publication of a work is important for determining the subsistence of copyright. Thus copyright subsists in any work only if the work is first published in India.
There are two situations of ownership of copyright. One, any employee may be author and in the other case, an independent contractor like advertising agency may be author. In both the cases since the work under copyright is done at the instance of the employer/Company, for the purposes of this Act, the employer/Company shall be deemed to the author of the unless any understanding contrary to this practice.
The first and foremost right is the right to reproduce the work in any material form.
Other rights are :
The owner of a copyright has exclusive right to do the above acts in respect of the work. If any person does any of these acts without authority he will be committing an infringement of the copyright in the work. Reproduction of the work in any material form and communication of the work to the public in certain forms are the usual methods by which the copyright in any work is commercially exploited for profit.
There are three types of remedies against infringement of Copyright; namely, Civil, criminal and Administrative.
Under civil remedies, the owner of a copyright can apply for injunction and damages. Whereas under criminal remedies he can make a complaint to the concerned police authorities about the infringement of copyright. The punishment under criminal remedy is six months imprisonment, with or without fine of Rs.50,000.
The administrative remedies provide, inter alia, for the removal of infringed copyright from the register.
There would always a question as to why a label also should be registered in the Copyright Act, when the same label is registered under the Trade and Merchandise Marks Act. What additional benefits are available if the label is registered under the Copyright Act, would be another usually asked question. Additional benefits are as under: