Copyright Compliance: How to Legally Share NewsclipsAs a PR professional, you monitor coverage of your business appearing online and in print. From time to time, you probably share some of this news with your management or colleagues. With the sharing of content made easier than ever, in the digital age publishers are increasingly determined to protect its distribution and use. Here are some tips to stay on the right side of copyright rules.
Ideas, procedures, processes, systems, methods of operation, concepts, or principles, do not receive copyright protection. And contrary to popular belief, a work does not have to be registered with the U.S. Copyright Office in order to be copyrighted; copyright exists from the moment a work is completed. Why free content isn't really free
Many magazines and newspapers have some or all of their content available online; and it’s possible to go to a doctor’s office or a library and read virtually any periodical for free. So why isn't the content free? The answer lies in the cost of production. Reading is free, but writing isn’t. Staff and printing costs are substantial. Publishers of newspapers, magazines, and websites rely on advertising and subscription revenue to cover their costs and to make a profit. They need accurate circulation figures in order to price their products appropriately, just as a widget manufacturing company needs to know how many widgets they’ve produced and sold.
Seek copyright permission before you:
You generally don’t have to seek permission before you:
Here’s how it works: We monitor thousands of publications, and we negotiate agreements with publishers, outlining how our clients can use the clips we find for them. On behalf of publishers, we collect a royalty fee for each article and for the average number of internal copies of that article our client makes. With this arrangement, our clients understand the value of the content, and the publishers are satisfied. Going forward, this small fee buys you peace of mind and makes it easy for your business to operate using copyrighted material. Without such a program, PR professionals would need to contact each publisher to obtain the right to share the actual clips with managers and co-workers interested in the results of media relations efforts. Most PR professionals don’t have the time to devote to this effort.
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