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Rights 101
by
Daniel Steven
Everyone talks about them, but few really understand.
What are the rights you sell to a magazine or a publisher?
First, lets review the basics. You
already should know that the author of an original work owns its copyright the instant it
is fixed on paper, disk, video, photograph or other tangible medium (unless it
was work for hire, see below). Registration
of the copyright with the U.S. Copyright office is NOT required, although registration
confers additional remedies in the event of infringement.
A copyright notice also is NOT required, but should be used on publication to
prevent claims of innocent infringement.
So what exactly is copyright? Section
106 of the 1976 Copyright Act gives the owner of copyright the following four exclusive
rights:
RIGHTS
1. to
reproduce the work in print copies or electronic form;
2. to prepare
derivative works (adaptations, screenplays, audiotapes, translations);
3. to
distribute copies (electronic or paper) of the work to the public by sale, rental, lease,
or lending; and
4. to perform
or display the work publicly.
When you sell your work to a publisher, you actually are transferring or
licensing one or more of these rights. This
grant of rights may be explicit (a written agreement) or implicit, and may be one
time only, for a period of years, or for the duration of your copyright; it may be
for print only, for electronic only, or a combination.
Ideally, all this should be specified in a publishing or contributors
agreement.
Periodicals. For
example, you submit an article to Elevator Inspector Magazine (EI). EI will publish your article provided it has not
appeared anywhere else previously. Therefore,
you might assign EI Magazine first North American serial rights meaning
that the magazine has the exclusive right to be the first periodical to publish the
article for distribution on the North American continent.
This is a licensing of Rights 1 and 3.
After publication by EI, you are free to license or assign these rights again, but
obviously you never can again offer first North American serial rights. You could, however, license first British
Commonwealth serial rights, or first South American serial rights. But what if you want to sell to another North
American publication? Simple: you would assign first reprint rights,
or second reprint rights. Once
again, Rights 1 and 3 are involved. If the
publisher doesnt care how often it has been published, or where it has been
published, you would simply offer one-time rights meaning that the
publisher may publish the article once.
Nowadays, of course, most magazines also have web sites and want to publish or archive
the article electronically. Ideally, this
should be covered in your contributors agreement, as Rights 1 and 3 are involved. Most such contracts will specify that the article
may be kept online for a specific period of time without further compensation. But what if you assign the rights to your work for
print publication, and are silent about electronic rights?
This was addressed by the Supreme Court in the case of NY Times v. Tasini;
the Court ruled that the New York Times only had the right to reproduce and distribute the
authors work in the edition in which it first appeared and was not entitled to
reproduce the work in on-line databases because these databases separated the work from
its original context. This means that unless
specifically covered in a written agreement with the publisher, it does NOT have the right
to publish your article electronically.
Book publishing. The
standard book publishing agreement will provide that the author licenses or assigns one or
all of the above rights to the Publisher in exchange for compensation (royalties). The license generally will be for the term of the
copyright (life plus 70 years), but will revert to the author under the conditions set
forth in the out of print clause of the agreement. (In addition, since 1976, any author may terminate
his or her grant of exclusive or nonexclusive rights after thirty-five years for post 1978
works.)
The Grant of Rights clause of the agreement will specify which rights
granted, and will vary by type of work and publisher.
Some publishers will require all rights, e.g., all right, title
and interest in and to the work, throughout the world, in perpetuity, and in any and all
media of expressions now known or hereafter devised.
Under this clause, Rights 1-4 are covered. A
less onerous Grant of Rights might state: all
print publication rights in the Work in the English language, throughout the world, for
the full term of the copyright in and to the Work. All
rights not expressly granted to Publisher are hereby reserved by Author. In this clause, the Author is only giving up Right
1, and part of Right 3. More common is for the Author to license all print
rights to the publisher (Right 1), plus subsidiary rights (Right 2) ¾ foreign,
book club, electronic, film, audio, drama ¾ plus Right 3
(distribution).
Unless there is a specific reason not to do so, always try to retain as many
subsidiary rights (under Right 2) as you can. Even
first novelists should be able to retain film and foreign rights. Dont skim over this clause examine it
closely, and, if necessary consult a lawyer or knowledgeable agent if you have questions.
Work Made for Hire. There
is a major exception to the principle of copyright ownership, where the actual author does
not own any rights in the work. In a
work made for hire situation, the party for whom the work was prepared
a publisher or an employer is the legal author of the work, and owns
all four of the Rights. Because of this, the
Copyright Act recognizes it in only two cases: (1)
where an employee creates copyrightable work in the course and scope of their employment,
such as a magazine or newspaper writer, or an ad agency copyrighter; or (2) when a writer
creates a specially commissioned work AND the agreement to do so is in writing.
In summary, authors should know exactly what rights to license, and for how
long. The rights you transfer should directly affect the price -- the more rights, the
higher the price. (For example, it is
reasonable to ask for a time limit on the publishers right to publish in digital
format, with the requirement that additional compensation be paid for a renewal.) The best approach is to be direct and specific
about all of the rights involved, and -- put it in writing!
©
Daniel Steven 2003 |
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