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All
images, product designs, and text that appear on this website are owned
by Oscar Newman LLC. All intellectual property on or displayed on this
site can not be used without permission. The United States Copyright
Office states:
WHO
CAN CLAIM COPYRIGHT
Copyright
protection subsists from the time the work is created in fixed form.
The copyright in the work of authorship immediately becomes the property
of the author who created the work. Only the author or those deriving
their rights through the author can rightfully claim copyright.
COPYRIGHTS
ARE SECURED AUTOMATICALLY UPON CREATION
No
publication or registration or other action in the Copyright Office
is required to secure copyright.
Copyright
is secured automatically when the work is created, and a work is "created"
when it is fixed in a copy or phonorecord for the first time. "Copies"
are material objects from which a work can be read or visually perceived
either directly or with the aid of a machine or device, such as books,
manuscripts, sheet music, film, videotape, or microfilm. "Phonorecords"
are material objects embodying fixations of sounds (excluding, by statutory
definition, motion picture soundtracks), such as cassette tapes, CDs,
or LPs. Thus, for example, a song (the "work") can be fixed
in sheet music (" copies") or in phonograph disks ("
phonorecords"), or both.
If
a work is prepared over a period of time, the part of the work that
is fixed on a particular date constitutes the created work as of that
date.
Copyright
registration is a legal formality intended to make a public record of
the basic facts of a particular copyright. However, registration is
NOT a condition of copyright protection, and Registration is not a requirement
for protection.
NOTICE
OF COPYRIGHT
The
use of a copyright notice is no longer required under U. S. law. Because
prior law did contain such a requirement, however, the use of notice
is still relevant to the copyright status of older works. Notice was
required under the 1976 Copyright Act. This requirement was eliminated
when the United States adhered to the Berne Convention, effective March
1, 1989.
For
more information on U.S. copyright laws visit the United States Copyright
Office at www.copyright.gov.
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