: Re: When is a good time to copyright your book? If you're submitting your book to a traditional publisher, when is a good time to copyright your book? Before you give it to the traditional publisher?
While law says you automatically own the copyright the moment the creation is fixed on a permanent medium (e.g. written), the judge of law is just a human, not omniscient: you need some way to show that you're the author. Registering your work in a way that is appropriate for your country (copyright office, notary) is a straightforward and fault-proof way to create such evidence, should it be needed.
It's best done ASAP - when you have the book, but before anyone else got a copy. Leaks or thefts happen, and once your work is "out in the wild" and you don't already have solid proofs in your hands, proving it was yours may become an uphill battle. If the work needs to be edited, or otherwise modified, the result is clearly a direct derivative of the registered work, so you don't need to worry about re-registering it - anyone trying to wrongly claim copyright on that automatically labels themselves as a plagiarist. Only if changes are so deep that new parts could stand on their own as separate works, you should consider re-registering the new edition.
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