: Licensed out content for book, whose name in copyright notice? Hello there. I hope this is not a completely basic question, but I could not find the answer anywhere else. I have written content
Hello there.
I hope this is not a completely basic question, but I could not find the answer anywhere else.
I have written content that a company wants to publish. We have signed a contract that grants them exclusive publishing/distribution rights for a certain amount of time.
So does the copyright notice in the book then state:
Copyright 2015 (my name)
or
Copyright 2015 (the company's name)?
More posts by @Sarah872
: Narrating something that happened between chapters as a flashback in a present-tense novel So say the novel is written in first-person tense. a chapter ends, and the next chapter starts 10 days
: Can I change my work and seel it if I am published with no contract? I have had a falling out with my publisher. She has published many of my works and is telling me I am not legally
2 Comments
Sorted by latest first Latest Oldest Best
In your name.
You hold the copyright to everything you create (with the exception of work for hire, as April points out) unless you expressly sell or transfer the copyright to another party or place it in the public domain (or if you are dead and enough time has passed).
Say someone reads your content and wants to republish it. Who do they negotiate with? The answer is you. You must honor the terms of your recent contract but you, and only you, get to set the terms of an additional one.
The company you signed the contract with in your question did not purchase a copyright transfer. They purchased the rights to publish your work along with a promise from you that you will not allow anyone else to publish it within a set period of time.
It is possible that your contract states a total transfer of copyright for X amount of time, after which all rights revert to you. But that will be explicit in your contract and is not the default. The contract may also mention how to attribute. Read it carefully.
The biggest question is "was it work for hire" (in which case it's the same as writing a memo at work -- the workplace/publisher owns it), or another deal? This may be something only that publisher (and your contract with it) may be able to answer directly.
Terms of Use Privacy policy Contact About Cancellation policy © selfpublishingguru.com2024 All Rights reserved.