Articles
Protecting your
IP with the Digital Millennium Copyright Act
When the Digital
Millennium Copyright Act was signed into law in 1998, the law
regrading intellectual properties as they exist in the
“virtual” marketplace was, if not secured, at least
addressed for the first time in copyright legislation.
This has not, however come without controversy.
Many who specialize in copyright litigation fear the
Digital Millennium Copyright Act is fatally flawed in that it
gives copyright owners too much freedom to issue cease and
desist letters to electronic publishers.
No matter what side
you dome down on the fairness of the Digital Millennium
Copyright Act legislation (or any of the exceptions that have
been made since 2000, 2002 and most notably in 2006), the
protections afforded in it can certainty be used to justly
protect copyrighted material from being stolen and used by
other “artists” that would claim it as their own.
The simple threat of copyright litigation is enough to
dissuade most people from stealing your stuff.
Of course, a great
deal of copyright litigation starts by discovering that your
copyright are being infringed upon.
While it may haphazardly come to your attention one way
or another, most often one isn't even aware unless they
periodically look. There
is nothing in the Digital Millennium Copyright Act that
suggests its anyone's business but your own to find evidence
of infringement.
The act of enforcement
is your own, and copyright litigation is your best
weapon to fight back.
Hope fully you can stay out of court, and the Digital
Millennium Copyright Act provides a bit of muscle beneath any
threat you might make to someone you have proof is violating
your copyright protected works.
When the threat of
copyright litigation is no longer enough, you will need the
help of a copyright attorney to assist you in bringing a solid
case to court. You
will need proof, so having a copyright laugher that
understands the technical side of how to gain that proof is
indispensable in pursuing a Digital Millennium Copyright Act
infringement claim in a court of law.
Those who wind up
pursuing copyright litigation with the help of an attorney
will find that even with the increased powers to defend
copyright against plunder granted by the Digital Millennium
Copyright Act, there are still plenty of protections for
defendants in the US legal system.
Even more frustrating to some engaged in international
copyright litigation, the laws of other nations, subject to
treaty, are sometimes less than forthcoming, making meaningful
persecution under the provisions of the Digital Millennium
Copyright Act difficult if not impossible sometimes.
Protecting a copyright
can be difficult with the advent of instantaneous
communication transfer of information, but the Digital
Millennium Copyright Act is designed to give copyright holders
a framework from which they can work. |