Copyright

A comprehensive AI agent skill for understanding and managing copyright. Helps creators protect their work, understand what copyright covers and what it does not, respond to infringement, navigate licensing, handle DMCA takedowns, and understand fair use in plain language.

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Copyright

The Right That Exists the Moment You Create

Copyright is unusual among legal protections because it requires nothing to activate. No registration. No notice. No application. The moment an original work is fixed in a tangible form — written, recorded, photographed, coded, painted — copyright exists. The creator owns it. Others need permission to copy, distribute, display, perform, or create derivatives of it.

Most creators do not know this. They believe copyright requires registration, or that the absence of a copyright notice means work is unprotected, or that something found on the internet is free to use. These misunderstandings cost creators money and expose users of creative work to liability that could have been avoided with basic knowledge.

This skill provides that knowledge.


What Copyright Protects

Copyright protects original creative expression fixed in a tangible medium. It protects the specific words of a written work, not the ideas or facts those words convey. It protects the specific melody and lyrics of a song, not the chord progression or the genre. It protects the specific visual expression of a photograph, not the subject matter or the scene.

The boundaries of what copyright protects matter because they determine both what creators can enforce and what others can use without permission. An author cannot copyright the plot structure of a hero's journey. A photographer cannot copyright the concept of photographing a mountain at sunrise. A software developer cannot copyright the idea of a to-do list application — but they can copyright the specific code they wrote to implement it.

The skill helps you understand where these boundaries fall for your specific type of work, which determines both how to protect what you create and how to evaluate whether your use of others' work requires permission.


Registration and Why It Matters

Copyright exists without registration, but registration matters. In the United States, registration is required before filing an infringement lawsuit for domestic works. More importantly, registration before infringement occurs — or within three months of first publication — makes statutory damages available in litigation.

Statutory damages are significant because they remove the burden of proving actual damages, which are often difficult to quantify in copyright cases. Without registration, a copyright owner who wins an infringement case can recover only their actual damages and the infringer's profits attributable to the infringement — numbers that can be small and expensive to prove. With timely registration, they can recover between $750 and $30,000 per infringement, up to $150,000 for willful infringement, plus attorney fees.

For professional creators whose work has commercial value, timely registration is not optional. It is the difference between a right that is enforceable and a right that is theoretical.


Fair Use

Fair use is the most misunderstood concept in copyright law, which is unfortunate because it is also one of the most important. Fair use allows the use of copyrighted material without permission in certain circumstances — commentary, criticism, parody, news reporting, education, research — and is evaluated case by case based on four factors.

The purpose and character of the use: commercial uses are less likely to qualify than noncommercial ones, and transformative uses that add new meaning or expression are more likely to qualify than uses that simply reproduce the original. The nature of the original work: factual works receive less protection than creative ones, making fair use more available for factual material. The amount and substantiality of the portion used: using a small excerpt is more likely to qualify than using a substantial portion, though the most important part of a work can defeat fair use even in small quantity. The effect on the market for the original: uses that substitute for the original or harm its market are less likely to qualify.

Fair use is not a bright line. It is a balancing test applied by courts to specific facts. The skill explains how to evaluate fair use arguments for your specific use case honestly rather than optimistically.


Responding to Infringement

When someone uses your copyrighted work without permission, you have options that range from informal to formal and from inexpensive to expensive. The right option depends on the nature of the infringement, the infringer, and what outcome you actually want.

A cease and desist letter is often the first step — a formal written demand that the infringement stop. For online infringement, a DMCA takedown notice to the platform hosting the infringing content is often faster and more effective than litigation. Licensing negotiation — converting the infringement into a paid license — is sometimes the most practical resolution when the infringer wants to use the work legitimately. Litigation is the last resort, appropriate when the infringement is significant, willful, and the infringer refuses to resolve it otherwise.

The skill walks through each option, when each is appropriate, and how to execute it.


DMCA Takedowns

The Digital Millennium Copyright Act's notice-and-takedown system allows copyright owners to have infringing content removed from online platforms without litigation. A properly formatted takedown notice sent to a platform's designated agent requires the platform to remove or disable access to the infringing content quickly or lose its safe harbor protection.

The skill covers DMCA takedowns completely: what a valid notice must contain, how to find the designated agent for any platform, what timeline to expect, what happens when the alleged infringer files a counter-notice, and when the DMCA system is and is not the right tool.

It also covers the counter-notice — the response available to someone whose content was removed by a takedown notice they believe was improper — and the consequences of filing false takedown notices, which carry legal liability.


Licensing Your Work

Copyright owners can license their work — grant permission for specific uses under specific conditions — without transferring ownership. Licensing is how creators monetize their work while retaining control over it, and how users of creative work obtain the permissions they need legally.

The skill covers licensing from both sides. For creators: the elements a license should specify, the difference between exclusive and non-exclusive licenses, how to price licenses for different uses, and the registrations and recordkeeping that protect your licensing relationships. For users: how to identify whether work is licensed and under what terms, what Creative Commons licenses permit and require, how to obtain licenses for commercial use of third-party content, and what to do when the copyright owner cannot be located.

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