Copyright and Patents
Copyright and patents are the two halves of intellectual property that aren't trademark or trade secret. Copyright protects original expression; patents protect inventions. They have different durations, different registration paths, and very different costs — copyright is cheap, patents are expensive. This guide covers what each protects and the practical mechanics for US businesses.
Copyright basics
Copyright protects original works of authorship fixed in a tangible medium of expression. Categories include literary works, musical works, dramatic works, pictorial and graphic works, audiovisual works, sound recordings, architectural works, and software (treated as literary work). The work must be original (modicum of creativity, not copied) and fixed (recorded somewhere durable enough to be perceived or reproduced).
Copyright protects expression, not ideas, facts, methods, systems, procedures, processes, or discoveries (17 U.S.C. §102(b)). A book about rocket design is copyrightable; the rocket design itself is not (it might be patentable). A photograph of a sunset is copyrightable; the sunset and the techniques of photography are not.
Copyright arises automatically the moment a qualifying work is created and fixed. No registration, no notice, no publication required for copyright to exist. Registration provides additional rights and is required for enforcement (see below).
Duration:
- Works by individuals: Life of the author plus 70 years.
- Works for hire and anonymous/pseudonymous works: The shorter of 95 years from publication or 120 years from creation.
Copyright registration
Copyright registration is handled by the US Copyright Office (a unit of the Library of Congress), not the USPTO. Registration is voluntary but required to:
- File an infringement suit in federal court for US-origin works (registration is a prerequisite to suit per Fourth Estate v. Wall-Street.com).
- Recover statutory damages (up to $30,000 per work for ordinary infringement, up to $150,000 for willful infringement).
- Recover attorneys' fees.
- Establish prima facie evidence of validity (if registered within five years of first publication).
Without registration, infringement remedies are limited to actual damages (often hard to prove) and disgorgement of profits. Statutory damages and fee-shifting are typically more valuable.
Registration mechanics:
- File: Online through eCO (electronic Copyright Office) at copyright.gov. Application includes information about the work, author, claimant, and any pre-existing material.
- Deposit: A copy of the work (one copy for unpublished works; two for published works in some categories). Software deposits may use redacted versions to protect source code under specific rules.
- Fee: Set by Copyright Office regulation; lower for single-author/single-work claims, higher for standard registrations.
- Timeline: Pendency varies; routinely several months from filing to certificate. Expedited processing available for fee.
Group registrations are available for certain categories (unpublished works, photographs, serial issues, etc.) allowing multiple works in one filing for one fee.
Work-for-hire and assignment
By default, the author of a work owns the copyright. For business purposes, this default often produces the wrong result: a contractor creates work and owns the copyright, with the engaging business holding only an implied non-exclusive license.
Two mechanisms transfer ownership to the engaging business:
Work made for hire (17 U.S.C. §101). Two paths:
- Employee within scope of employment. Works created by employees in the scope of their employment are works for hire by operation of law; employer is the author.
- Specifically commissioned works in nine enumerated categories. The contract must be in writing and signed before creation, expressly stating the work is "for hire". The nine categories: contribution to a collective work, part of a motion picture or audiovisual work, translation, supplementary work, compilation, instructional text, test, answer material for a test, atlas. Software and most other business deliverables are NOT in the nine categories.
The "work for hire" label on a contractor agreement covering software, marketing copy, or most other business deliverables doesn't make it work for hire. Belt-and-suspenders practice: include both work-for-hire language AND an outright copyright assignment in any agreement with a non-employee creating works for the business.
Assignment. A written agreement signed by the author transferring copyright to the assignee (17 U.S.C. §204). This works for any type of work and is the reliable way to obtain copyright in works the business hasn't created itself. Recording the assignment with the Copyright Office is optional but provides constructive notice to subsequent claimants.
Fair use
Fair use (17 U.S.C. §107) is a defense to copyright infringement, not an affirmative right. The statute lists four factors courts weigh:
- Purpose and character of the use, including commercial vs nonprofit and transformative vs merely reproductive. Transformative uses (adding new meaning, message, or expression) weigh in favor.
- Nature of the copyrighted work. Use of factual works is more likely fair than use of highly creative works.
- Amount and substantiality of the portion used in relation to the work as a whole. Less is better, but even small uses of the "heart" of a work can weigh against fair use.
- Effect on the potential market for or value of the copyrighted work. Substitution effects weigh against; non-substituting uses (criticism, parody, scholarship) weigh in favor.
Fair use is fact-specific and unpredictable. Common situations where fair use likely applies: criticism, commentary, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, research, parody. Common situations where it likely doesn't: copying for the same market purpose as the original; copying large portions of expressive works; using copyrighted material to promote competing products. Recent Supreme Court decisions (Warhol Foundation, Google v. Oracle) have refined the doctrine; recent case law is worth checking for novel situations.
Fair use is not a license. Even when the use is fair, the user may have to litigate to establish it. Where fair use is unclear and the copyright holder is identifiable and reachable, asking for a license is often faster and cheaper than relying on fair use.
DMCA notice and takedown
The Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA, 17 U.S.C. §512) provides safe harbors for online service providers against copyright liability for user-uploaded content, in exchange for compliance with notice-and-takedown procedures. To qualify:
- Designate an agent to receive notifications (register with the Copyright Office).
- Adopt and implement a policy for terminating repeat infringers.
- Accommodate standard technical measures used by copyright holders.
- Respond expeditiously to takedown notices that include the required information.
- Process counter-notifications and restore content if the original notifier doesn't sue within the statutory window.
Sending a DMCA takedown requires the notifier to provide identification, identify the work and the infringing material, contact info, statement of good faith belief that the use is not authorized, statement of accuracy under penalty of perjury, and signature.
Sending a knowingly false takedown notice (17 U.S.C. §512(f)) creates liability to the affected party. Don't use DMCA as a tool against criticism, competitors using fair use, or content you don't actually own.
Patent basics
A patent grants the holder the right to exclude others from making, using, selling, offering for sale, or importing the patented invention for the patent term. Patents are granted by the USPTO after examination; the standards are high and the process is expensive.
Three patent types in the US:
- Utility patents. Cover new and useful processes, machines, manufactures, or compositions of matter (and improvements to any of these). 20-year term from earliest non-provisional filing date.
- Design patents. Cover new, original, and ornamental designs for an article of manufacture. 15-year term from grant.
- Plant patents. Cover new varieties of asexually reproduced plants. Rare in business contexts.
Requirements for utility patents:
- Patent-eligible subject matter. Must be a process, machine, manufacture, or composition of matter. Abstract ideas, laws of nature, and natural phenomena are not patentable (the Alice/Mayo framework restricts software and business method patents).
- Novelty (35 U.S.C. §102). Not previously disclosed in any "prior art" anywhere in the world. The US is a first-inventor-to-file system since the America Invents Act of 2013.
- Non-obviousness (§103). Not obvious to a person of ordinary skill in the relevant art.
- Utility (§101). Must have a specific, substantial, and credible utility.
- Enablement and written description (§112). The application must enable a person of ordinary skill to make and use the invention.
Utility patents
Utility patents are the patents most businesses think of: a new product, a new manufacturing process, a new chemical compound, a new software-implemented method (subject to the Alice/Mayo limitations).
An application includes:
- Specification. Detailed written description of the invention enabling someone skilled in the art to make and use it.
- Drawings. Where necessary to understand the invention.
- Claims. The numbered statements defining the scope of legal protection. Claim drafting is the heart of patent practice — broader claims are more valuable but more vulnerable to invalidation; narrower claims are safer but easier to design around.
- Abstract. Brief summary.
- Inventor declaration and filing forms.
- Information Disclosure Statement. Disclosing known prior art the applicant is aware of (duty of disclosure to the USPTO).
Patent prosecution (examination process) typically takes 2–3+ years from filing to issuance for utility patents, with multiple office actions exchanging arguments and amendments. Total cost from search through issuance is commonly $10,000–$25,000+ in attorney fees plus USPTO fees, depending on complexity.
Design patents
Design patents protect the ornamental appearance of a product, not its functional features. Examples: the curved shape of a bottle, the layout of icons on a phone, the shape of a chair. The application consists primarily of drawings — multiple views of the design with claimed features in solid lines and unclaimed features in broken lines.
Design patents are cheaper and faster than utility patents (typically $1,500–$3,500 in attorney fees, 1–2 year prosecution timeline) but provide narrower protection: only the specific ornamental appearance, not functional aspects or variations. For products where the visual design is part of the value (consumer goods, packaging, jewelry, fashion accessories that can't be protected as utility), design patents are useful and often filed alongside utility patents.
Provisional applications
A provisional patent application establishes a filing date for a utility invention without requiring claims, formal drawings, or the formalities of a non-provisional application. The provisional itself is never examined and expires 12 months after filing — the applicant must convert it to a non-provisional within that window to preserve the filing date.
Benefits of filing provisional:
- Establishes "patent pending" status.
- Preserves filing date as of provisional filing.
- Lower upfront cost (USPTO fee plus minimal attorney time, often $1,500–$3,500).
- Gives 12 months to develop the invention, evaluate commercial potential, and decide whether to pursue full prosecution.
- Defers most attorney work.
The critical practical point: the provisional must adequately describe the invention to provide priority for whatever ends up in the non-provisional claims. A poorly-drafted provisional with thin disclosure provides no priority for inventive aspects not actually described. "Cheap provisionals" are sometimes worse than no provisional at all because they create false confidence about priority.
Patent prosecution
The examination process:
- Filing. Application filed with USPTO.
- Pre-examination review. Formal compliance check.
- Examiner assignment. Application assigned to a USPTO examiner in the relevant art unit.
- First office action. Examiner reviews prior art and patentability requirements; issues rejection citing specific references or allows claims as filed. First office actions usually contain at least some rejections.
- Response. Applicant argues against rejections, amends claims, or both. Iterates with examiner.
- Final office action. If issues remain, second office action labeled "final" — though "final" is misleading; the applicant can file a Request for Continued Examination, appeal to the Patent Trial and Appeal Board, or abandon.
- Allowance. If patentable claims are reached, Notice of Allowance issues. Applicant pays issue fee.
- Issuance. Patent grants.
Post-issuance, maintenance fees are due at 3.5, 7.5, and 11.5 years (each progressively larger). Missing a maintenance fee abandons the patent.
International patent protection
Patents are territorial; a US patent provides no rights outside the US. International protection options:
- Direct national filings. File in each country of interest within the Paris Convention 12-month priority window from the first filing.
- PCT (Patent Cooperation Treaty). Single international application establishing priority in 150+ contracting states. The PCT process includes an international search and (optionally) preliminary examination; conversion to national applications in selected countries occurs at 30 or 31 months from priority. The PCT defers most national-stage costs but doesn't avoid them.
- Regional filings. EPO (European Patent Office) for European patents, validated in member states after grant.
International patent protection is expensive: $50,000–$200,000+ over the life of a patent family across multiple countries is typical, not exceptional.
Trade secrets as alternative
For inventions that can be kept secret, trade secret protection (under DTSA and state UTSA) may be preferable to patents. Trade secrets have no expiration as long as secrecy is maintained, no filing fees, no public disclosure. The trade-off: patents are protected even if independently discovered or reverse-engineered; trade secrets are not.
Patents and trade secrets are often complementary — the patented aspects are disclosed and protected by exclusion rights; the manufacturing know-how, performance tuning, and process details are kept as trade secrets. Coca-Cola's formula is the famous trade secret example.
Enforcement
Copyright infringement. Federal court suit under 17 U.S.C. §501. Remedies: injunction, actual damages plus infringer's profits, or statutory damages (if registered timely), attorneys' fees (if registered). DMCA notice-and-takedown for online infringement is faster and cheaper for many cases.
Patent infringement. Federal court suit (district courts have exclusive jurisdiction; appeals go to the Federal Circuit). Remedies: injunction (after eBay v. MercExchange, no longer automatic), damages (reasonable royalty or lost profits), enhanced damages for willful infringement, attorneys' fees in exceptional cases. Patent litigation is expensive — full trials often cost millions per side.
The International Trade Commission (ITC) is an alternative venue for excluding infringing imports under Section 337 of the Tariff Act. Faster than district court and produces exclusion orders enforceable by Customs.
The USPTO's Patent Trial and Appeal Board (PTAB) provides inter partes review (IPR) and post-grant review (PGR) procedures for challenging issued patents administratively — cheaper than litigation and used heavily as a defensive tool.
Costs and timelines
| Item | Typical cost | Timeline |
|---|---|---|
| Copyright registration (single work) | USPTO/CO fee + minimal time | Several months |
| Provisional patent | $1,500–$3,500 | Days to file |
| Utility patent (filing through issue) | $10,000–$25,000+ | 2–3+ years |
| Design patent | $1,500–$3,500 | 1–2 years |
| PCT + national stage (basic) | $50,000+ | 3–5+ years |
| Patent maintenance fees over life | Several thousand | Years 3.5, 7.5, 11.5 |
Common mistakes
- Not registering copyright before infringement. Registration before infringement (or within 3 months of publication) is required for statutory damages and fees. Late registration limits remedies to actual damages.
- Assuming contractor work is work-for-hire. Software, marketing materials, and most business deliverables are not in the nine work-for-hire categories. Need a signed assignment.
- Public disclosure before patent filing. Public disclosure (sale, public use, publication) before filing destroys patentability outside the US and starts the 12-month US grace period. File before disclosing where possible.
- Thin provisional applications. A provisional that doesn't fully describe the invention provides priority only for what it actually describes.
- Filing patents on unpatentable subject matter. Pure software, business methods, and abstract ideas face Alice/Mayo rejections that are often insurmountable. Consult patent counsel before investing in patent applications for software inventions.
- Missing maintenance fees. Patents and copyright registrations don't require periodic re-registration (copyright doesn't expire from missed filings; patent maintenance fees are due at intervals).
- Sending DMCA takedowns for non-infringing content. Section 512(f) creates liability for knowingly false notices.
- Relying on fair use without analysis. Fair use is unpredictable; relying on it without legal analysis exposes the user to litigation risk.
FAQ
Do I need to register copyright to have a copyright? No. Copyright exists automatically. Registration is needed to sue and to claim statutory damages and attorneys' fees.
Do I need the © symbol? Not since 1989 (US joined Berne Convention). It still provides notice and may help with damages in some cases.
Can I patent an idea? No. Patents require concrete inventions, not abstract ideas. The invention must be fully described in the application enabling someone skilled in the field to make and use it.
How long does a patent take? Utility patents typically issue 2–3 years after filing; some longer if office actions are extensive. Design patents are faster.
Should I get a patent or keep my invention as a trade secret? If the invention can be reverse-engineered from the product, patent it. If it can be kept secret (manufacturing process, internal algorithm), trade secret may be cheaper and longer-lasting.
What's a "patent pending"? An application is on file but not yet granted. The phrase has no legal protective effect by itself but deters competitors who might face a future infringement claim if a patent issues.
Can I patent software? Some software is patentable, but the Alice/Mayo line of cases has restricted patentability. Pure abstract ideas implemented on a generic computer are not patentable; software with a specific technical improvement is more likely patentable. Software patenting decisions benefit from specialist counsel.
Who owns copyright in employee work? The employer, automatically, as work made for hire, for works created in the scope of employment.
Who owns copyright in contractor work? The contractor, by default, unless the agreement specifies otherwise. Use both work-for-hire language and a copyright assignment in contractor agreements.