Page:Copyright Office Compendium 3rd Edition - Full.djvu/262

, Third Edition 618.8&emsp;Examination Guidelines: Author Created / Nature of Authorship

This Section discusses the U.S. Copyright Office’s practices and procedures for examining the Author Created field in an online application and the Nature of Authorship space in a paper application.

618.8(A)&emsp;Authorship Unclear

The authorship that the intends to register should be clearly identified in the application and the  to copyright in that authorship should be clearly stated.

As a general rule, the U.S. Copyright Office will accept any of the terms set forth in, any of the terms set forth in or  (in the case of an application to register a , a , or a contribution to a collective work), or any combination of those terms, unless the information provided in the Author Created field or the Nature of Authorship space fails to describe the authorship that the applicant intends to register, fails to describe  authorship, or is contradicted by information provided elsewhere in the registration materials.

The Office recognizes that many applicants are not familiar with the correct terms for completing an application or may make a mistake in completing the Author Created field or the Nature of Authorship space. As a general rule, “[a]ny substantive editing of authorship and/or new matter statements and/or material excluded from claim statements, will be done only after contacting the applicant for permission to amend the information” set forth in that portion of the application. Online Registration of Claims to Copyright, 72 Fed. Reg. 36,883, 36,887 (July 6, 2007). In some cases, the may add an  to the record to clarify the copyrightable material that the author contributed to the work. If the information provided in the Author Created field or the Nature of Authorship space is unclear and the issue cannot be addressed with an annotation, the registration specialist will communicate with the applicant.

Examples of unclear terms that should be avoided in the application are discussed in Sections 618.8(A)(1) through 618.8(A)(11) below.

618.8(A)(1)&emsp;Design

As a general rule, the terms “2-D artwork” or “sculpture” should be used to describe the authorship in a pictorial, graphic, or sculptural work, while the term “” should be used to describe the copyrightable authorship in a computer program.

The term “design” should not be used in the Author Created field or the Nature of Authorship space, because it suggests that the may be asserting a  in an idea, procedure, process, system, method of operation, concept, principle, or discovery.

Example:

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 * An application is submitted for a book titled Redesign Your Backyard. The contain text and two-dimensional artwork depicting landscape designs. The application states that the