Screenwriting : Why copyright registration is the best way to protect your script. by Dane Johnson

Dane Johnson

Why copyright registration is the best way to protect your script.

Copyright protection for independent film should begin with its treatments, outlines, and draft script. It’s in these early documents that the screenwriter’s unprotectable ideas become “fixed in a tangible medium“—the moment that they change from being something anyone might have and something that only the author can claim. You can’t protect a mere idea with copyright, only the expression of the idea.

Ideas about how to protect those expressions, however, are abundant, and they are all too often wrong. One persistent notion is the so-called “poor man’s copyright”. It’s the idea that mailing a copy of your completed script to yourself in a sealed envelope and never opening it until needed is irrefutable proof that the work inside belonged exclusively to you as of the date shown by the postmark. Copyright protection forever for the price of a Forever stamp is the thinking.

But it’s wrong for a couple of very important reasons. First, it provides at best minimally useful evidence of the date on which the work may have been created. Postmarks, for example, do not show the date on which the work was deposited in the mail. Nor are sealed envelopes with no documented chain of custody likely to even be admissible evidence. If they are, they are certain to be allowed only with a limiting instruction for a jury that will probably see them as having little persuasive value.

Second, even if a sealed envelope did provide indisputable proof of ownership of a work not registered with the Copyright Office, the value of that proof would be severely limited. Under 17 U.S.C. § 301(a), the federal Copyright Act preempts all state law claims alleging violations of rights that are equivalent to the exclusive rights protected by copyright. “Preempts” means that federal law applies to the dispute. And federal law is clear that without copyright registration, not only is the plaintiff (in this case, the screenwriter of the unregistered work) unable to sue in federal court, he or she would be limited to recovering economic damages that he or she can actually prove, if any. Most of the time, claims that infringement caused an author to lose some amount of money will be pure speculation. In contrast, infringement of registered works entitles the plaintiff to statutory damages. These are amounts awarded by the court regardless of whether there is proof of actual economic loss.

The short answer? Save the stamp. Register your work with the Copyright Office.

Kelvin Fahey

Dane, excellent commentary - agree totally. Cheers from Australia

Mark Thorpe

Have just completed WGA submission and the process is now underway for Copyright certification. Best to cover the bases. I believe there will be changes made to the current screenplay but at least at this stage, first polished draft, it has the protection it needs should I want to get a proofreader on the case.

Abdul-Razak Ramadan

Hi Dane! I am going the writer of “Behind the desert” which is based on a true story. Now I have a pitch deck ready. Please share with me your email address. My email is rabramas@yahoo.com and mmayalya@gmail.com. Thank you

Doug Nelson

The absolute best way to protect your fabulous script from prying eyes is to lock it away in a desk drawer and never talk about it or show it to anyone - kinda defeats the purpose bow doesn't it?

Kiril Maksimoski

No script is perfect unless at least dozen industry brainiac's do a turn on it...and for that to happen someone's gotta initiate...

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