Page:Copyright Office Compendium 3rd Edition - Full.djvu/103

, Third Edition authorship, but not in the “canvas,” “compact disc,” “digital music file,” or other medium that the author used to create the work.

503.1(E)&emsp;Copyrightable Authorship

When completing an application, the applicant should identify the authorship that the author contributed to the work, but should not assert a  in any aspect of the work that is not protected by copyright. For more information on what constitutes uncopyrightable authorship, see.

The following chart provides representative examples of various types of works and the copyrightable authorship they typically contain, as distinguished from the uncopyrightable material that may appear in the work. In these examples, the Office may register a claim to copyright in the “text,” “photographs,” “artwork,” or other forms of copyrightable authorship that the author contributed to the work, but not the “facts,” “listing of ingredients,” “process,” “method,” “name,” “typeface,” “typographic ornamentation,” or other uncopyrightable material.