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Archive for February, 2006

The Legalities of Copyright Protection, originally appeared in Four Corners Business Journal, Feb. 20, 2006

In ART on February 22, 2006 at 11:14 pm

PAGOSA SPRINGS — A work of art, be it a painting, a sculpture, a photograph, a piece of jewelry, a ceramic vessel, a wooden carving, a poem or a work of fiction is considered to be Intellectual Property (IP). Shy Rabbit, an artist-run art center in Pagosa Springs, recently hosted Colorado Lawyers for the Arts board member Christopher Beall from Faegre & Benson in Denver. Beall, an IP litigator, discussed the finer points of IP: Patents; Copyright; Trademark and Trade Secrets. Issues critically important for artists, writers, musicians and performers to understand, but frequently overlooked until it is too late.

“The thing all artists need to get in the habit of thinking about,” Beall said, “is if you want to engage in the arts you should think about it as a business and do what businesses do — have a lawyer. Approach your business as a business and not as a free spirit. Yes, it’s an art business, but it’s still a business.”

Beall was invited to Shy Rabbit to assist artists in beginning to approach their arts business in a businesslike manner. More than a dozen artists attended two half-day workshops. The Business Journal will cover the IP aspect of copyright in this issue and patent and trademark in the March 6 issue. Look for further articles to cover Internet protection and the basics of contracts, licenses and entity formation in future issues.

COPYRIGHT

A copyright involves the expression of an idea. According to the Copyright Act of 1976, “copyright protection subsists . . . in original works of authorship fixed in any tangible medium of expression . . . from which they can be perceived, reproduced or otherwise communicated . . .” In other words, a copyright exists from the moment the work is fixed in a tangible medium of expression, either on paper or digitally recorded in a computer. The moment the writer fixes the words to the document or the artist fixes the sketch to paper, it is copyrighted. Copyrightable works of authorship include literary works; musical works; dramatic works; pantomimes and choreographic works; pictorial, graphic and sculptural works; motion pictures and other audio-visual works; sound recordings and architectural works.

Copyright and patent law are constitutional law, drafted by the founding fathers. The copyright code of 1789 stated that Congress shall have the power “to promote the progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited times to authors and inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries.” Copyright law originally protected the nonfiction writing of scientists and the useful discoveries of inventors for 15 years. It was designed to encourage thinkers to convey their knowledge to the world.

Today, copyright protection is guaranteed for the lifetime of the creator, plus 70 years (for corporations, for the lifetime of the creator, plus 50 years). The owner of a copyright has the exclusive rights to do and authorize the reproduction of copyrighted work; to prepare derivatives and deviations of the work; to distribute copies; to perform copyrighted works publicly; to display copyrighted works publicly; to perform a sound recording by digital audio transmission.

Copyright cannot and does not protect concepts, ideas, procedures, systems, methods or operations, moods, or thematic structure.

Some common copyright myths:

Work must be registered with the copyright office in order for the creator to have a copyright.

Not true; a work is copyrighted the moment it is fixed in a tangible medium. However, if your work is not registered with the copyright office www.copyright.gov, it will make it more difficult to sue if someone wrongfully copies your work. Without registering, you cannot obtain statutory damages and attorney’s fees. An artist or writer can register a body of work for $35. Burn all images or documents on a disk and send them in with the proper paperwork. Website files can be burned every 90 days and submitted for copyright protection.

If there is no copyright notice—the letter ‘c’ inside the circle— the work is not protected by copyright law.

Wrong. All work is protected the moment it is fixed in a tangible medium and the presence or lack of presence of the copyright symbol means nothing. Under the Berne Convention Implementation Act of 1988 no formalities are required for the creation of copyright rights. But it doesn’t hurt to remind people that the work is copyrighted. In Word the hot keys are option + G.

Mailing a letter to myself with my work inside and keeping the envelope sealed, is just as good as submitting the work for copyright registration.

Wrong. See the answer to number one above. Courts do not recognize this “poor woman’s copyright.” It’s only $35 to protect your work. Cough it up. It will save money in the long run.

I can copyright the title to my great American novel, my sculpture, my whatever.

Nope. Sorry. No matter how brilliant it is you cannot copyright the title. Phrases, slogans and titles are not eligible for copyright protection. However, the title of a series of books, can, in certain circumstances, be registered as a trademark under the Lanham Act.

If an apprentice makes the work and I call it a work for hire, then I own the copyright.

“Work made for hire” applies only to the following: A work prepared by an employee within the scope of her employment; or a specially commissioned work that is a contribution to a collective work, a part of a motion picture, a sound recording, an instructional text, a test or answers to a test, an atlas. Notice that sculpture, choreography, ballet and screenplay are not included in this list. And remember, an independent contractor needs to have a written and signed contract. Then, the employer and not the person doing the work owns the copyright.

If I own the copyright in a photograph of a celebrity, I can use the photograph however I want.

Well, not exactly. Every person, not just celebrities, controls the right to the exploitation of their likeness. Is it mere replication or is it a transformative and artistic creation? It is best to get permission in writing in the form of a legal agreement, but that still might not be enough. This is an area that requires the consult of legal expertise.

If I own the negative of a photograph that someone else took, I can make as many copies as I want or, if I own a piece of sculpture, I can sell as many copies of the sculpture as I want.

Simple answer. No. The artist may continue to exploit the value of the work after it is sold. Sell the original, license the prints. Make T-shirts. The artist owns the copyright.

If our town owns a commissioned mural or sculpture, they can take the piece down whenever they want.
Sorry, not without permission. The Visual Artists Rights Act provides the artist with the right of attribution; the right to control attribution to a distorted or mutilated version of the work; the right to prevent intentional distortion, mutilation or other modification of the work if such alterations would be prejudicial to the author’s honor or reputation; the right to prevent destruction of a work of recognized stature.

If I use less than 10 percent, 10 seconds or 10 words of someone else’s work, I cannot be held liable for copyright infringement.

There are no magic numbers. If you take the heart of the work, even if it is one line of a poem or 500 words of a 20,000-word book, it is copyright infringement. However there is such a thing as “Fair Use.” The fair use of a copyrighted work includes criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship or research. Factors in determining fair use include the purpose and character of the use, including whether such use is of a commercial nature or is for nonprofit educational purposes; the nature of the copyrighted work; the amount and sub
stantiality of the portion used in relation to the copyrighted work as a whole; and the effect of the use on the potential market for or value of the copyrighted work. In other words, it’s not fair if your use of the copyrighted work is taking away sales from the author.

If my work is a parody of someone else’s work, then it will always be protected by the “fair use” defense.

A parody is commentary on the original work and may constitute “fair use” of the underlying copyrighted material only if it uses only so much of the original work as is necessary to suggest, rather than copy, the original work. And a work of parody is protected only if it is “transformative” (a dramatic change in appearance or meaning!).

If a song is in the public domain I can use it however I want.

Yes, the 1812 Overture is in the public domain and may be used. However, Jon William’s arrangement of the 1812 Overture is protected by copyright. So be aware.

If I copy something from the Internet I don’t have to worry about copyright infringement.
No. Copyright law applies to the Internet.

For more information, or to find a lawyer, contact Colorado Lawyers for the Arts, www.lawyersforthearts.org or reach them by phone at (303) 722-7994.

Halliburton comes to Pagosa … for a day, Pagosa Springs SUN, Dec. 22, 2005

In ART on February 2, 2006 at 6:03 pm

The world’s largest provider of services to the oil and gas industry was hired by BootJack Management Company to cap two geothermal wells in downtown Pagosa Springs this week. The geothermal wells are located on property between the Archuleta County Courthouse and Fifth Street, adjacent to the former Chevron station.

“The casing lining on the wells is worn out and water is seeping out all over, endangering the courthouse.” David J. Brown said. “Halliburton will cap off the old wells and we will have to drill new wells.”

Halliburton completed work on the wells Dec. 20.

Brown and his company, BootJack Management, purchased the property from Lou Poma this year. Fuel tanks at the site were removed during the summer and demolition of structures at the site began this week. Next spring, according to Brown, the area will be planted and kept as open space until a development plan is finalized.

“It will be a minimum of two years. We are currently master planning the site,” Brown said.

The geothermal wells on the property were drilled in 1955 as a favor to Vic Poma, Lou Poma’s father. Vic Poma moved to Pagosa Springs in 1944 and bought the station, which consisted of two hand-crank gasoline pumps. He purchased a 10-foot square building and started a business that he would own until 1985, adding lots, bays and buildings. In 1955, a seismograph crew spent a month in Pagosa Springs searching the area for uranium. After each day’s work, Vic Poma would keep the seismograph trucks in good repair, working on them all night.

“As a token of their appreciation, they asked if he would like a couple of hot water wells and drilled them for him for free,” Lou Poma said.

Over time, the casing linings corroded. “They’ve been there for fifty years,” Poma said. “The minerals in the water eat through the metal.”

Lou Poma inherited the metal building with a full basement that was once Western Auto. In 1990, Poma bought back the service station and convenience store on the neighboring property and converted the old Western Auto into a Big O Tire store.
In 2001, Poma approached Archuleta County and offered to sell the county the property.

“I offered it to them for $650,000,” Poma said. “They knew then that they needed to expand the jail and they had just got a grant or something.”

The county passed on the offer, even though the property was appraised at $990,000 in 1999. BootJack Management purchased the property in 2005 for $1,050,000.

“I wanted to get out of there pretty bad,” Poma said. “I had enough.”

Poma said he never had any problem with the geothermal wells. Water problems he had at the site in February 2005 involved plastic piping under the concrete that utilized geothermal water to melt snow on the driveway.

“One of the plastic pipes leaked right over the filler pipe of the fuel tank,” Poma said.

Three hundred gallons of water ended up in the 8,000-gallon fuel tank. The tank was not full and no fuel ever spilled. The tank sensor went off, but staff of the Mataya’s Chevron, which rented the convenience store and gas station from Poma, did nothing and several customers unknowingly filled their auto tanks with water instead of gasoline.

As for the tearing down of property that once belonged to his family and his thoughts on the future, Poma said, “Hey, life goes on.

“The filling station died in 2005 and it’s going to be replaced with something newer and hopefully something to benefit the town,” Poma added. “Mr. Brown is going to use the hot water, and God bless him; I didn’t have the money to do it and he does. He’s going to make it bigger and better and nicer than I ever could. As far as what he is doing – I think it’s fantastic for the town.”

Wolf Creek Skier Visits Down, Four Corners Business Journal, Jan. 16, 2006

In ART on February 1, 2006 at 5:53 pm

PAGOSA SPRINGS — The snow gods have not blessed the Four Corners. Wolf Creek Ski Area reports that they are 50 percent behind in snowfall. As of press time, base depth at the summit was only 37 inches — this for the ski area that boasts “the most snow in Colorado,” and accumulated 535 inches of snow for the 2004-05-ski season.

December skier visits are down for Wolf Creek Ski Area. Nearly 51,000 skiers hit the slopes last month, down 3,500 from December 2004 — a 6 percent decrease.

“Lack of snow hurt us in the beginning,” Rosanne Haidorfer-Pitcher, director of marketing and sales, said. “We lost three weeks of the season and probably a little more.”

Last year, Wolf Creek opened Oct. 29, thanks to several early sea- son snowstorms. This year, the ski area didn’t open until Nov. 12. Only 6,740 skiers visited Wolf Creek in November, compared to 31,983 last year and an additional 1,764 in October, which is an 80 percent decrease.

“We did really well over Christmas and we are doing really well now,” Pitcher added. “I think we are getting New Mexico skiers because we have more snow than New Mexico. That’s what’s keeping our numbers healthy.”

Overall skier visits year-to-date are down 34 percent from last year.

In spite of the limited snow, Pitcher says that conditions are good. “The snow quality is really good, but there are more obstacles, bushes and the tops of trees that are usually covered with snow.”

There are three months left in the ski season and nearly 60 percent of skier visits happened last year during the last three months of the season. The 2004-05-ski season was an exceptional, record-breaking year for Wolf Creek ski area, which saw a total of 215,821 skiers enjoy the 535 inches of natural snowfall. Skier numbers at the ski area have steadily increased since the record low ski season of 1999-00 that saw only 114,802 skiers and a dismal 188 inches of total snowfall.

With a year-to-date total snowfall of 82 inches, many are wondering what will appease the snow gods? What sort of offering can we make to muster up a blizzard of wet snow?

“We’re just hoping that things change around,” Pitcher said.