While it’s true that no strings are attached to using public domain materials, you should be aware of certain potholes on the public domain highway, as described below.
Multilayered WorksWorks such as movies or sound recordings may contain many underlying works, such as musical sound tracks, painted illustrations, or other works. There has been a disturbing trend by some copyright owners to assert protection in an element of a public domain work. For example, the film It’s a Wonderful Life fell into the public domain because of a failure to renew copyright. For years, anyone was free to copy and sell the movie on videotape. However, a production company recently acquired rights to the musical sound track that is used in the movie. That sound track is not in the public domain. The copyright owner of the sound track can now prevent anyone from copying the music, thereby effectively stopping anyone from copying the film (unless the sound track is removed). Multilayered works can create confusion when trying to determine public domain status.
Usually you don’t have to be concerned with this type of legal maneuver as it is only used in connection with popular and older multilayered works such as classic films. It would be difficult, if not impossible, to apply this procedure to a public domain book or painting.
Ignore Heading – Sub table content EXAMPLEA movie musical containing songs by Cole Porter is in the public domain because of a failure to renew copyright. However, the Cole Porter songs were renewed in time, so they are still protected by copyright and cannot be reproduced without permission. Therefore, you must obtain permission from the copyright owner of the Cole Porter songs in order to copy the public domain film. If you do not want to obtain permission from the owner, you must delete the songs from the film.
Dear Rich : She Wants to Use Bloch Paintings on TVDear Rich: I am a television producer who would love to use the work of the Danish painter Carl Bloch within a project of mine. Bloch was born on May 23, 1834 in Copenhagen, Denmark. I’m sure his work is in the public domain and out of copyright but would I have to pay any kind of royalties or fees to anyone to broadcast his paintings on television.You are correct. Bloch’s work is in the public domain. Danish copyright lasts for the life of the author plus 70 years and Bloch died in 1890. You should not have to pay a fee for the right to broadcast the paintings on a television program; however you may have to pay a fee to acquire access to the paintings—for example, some museums require photographic access fees or fees for the right to use photographic reproductions prepared especially for the museum. Note, as we have indicated in previous posts, there is no copyright in a slavish photo reproduction of a public domain painting.
If the work is in the public domain, why is there a copyright notice on Bloch’s painting? Possibly because establishments such as the Hope Gallery earn revenue by selling reproductions of public domain works and include the copyright notice with the intention of discouraging competitors and tracking copying on the Internet (such as performed here by the Dear Rich Staff). We suppose we could remove the notice (since copyright law prohibits the placement of false copyright notices) but we’re too busy packing up personal belongings to mess with Photoshop right now. (By the way, copyright law prohibits the fraudulent removal of notices as well.)
Ignore Heading – Sub table content Public Domain Works That Are ModifiedModifications to a public domain work may be protected by copyright and cannot be used without permission. A famous example used in many copyright classes is the artist who paints an elaborate hat and mustache on the Mona Lisa. Even though anyone is free to copy the image of the Mona Lisa, the modified image (with mustache and hat) is protected under the artist’s copyright.
Ignore Heading – Sub table content EXAMPLEColor has been added to the black-and-white public domain film God’s Little Acre. This colorization process is copyrightable. Therefore, the colorized version of God’s Little Acre cannot be copied without permission.
Plagiarism, Attribution, and the Public DomainIf you copy from a public domain writing, do you have to credit the author? The United States Supreme Court has answered “No,” holding that there is no legal requirement to provide any attribution when public domain works are copied and placed into new works. (Dastar Corp. v. 20th Century Fox Film Corp., 123 S.Ct. 2041 (2003).)
However, just because there is no legal requirement to give credit to the creators of public domain works, that doesn’t mean you don’t have to do it. When copying works from the public domain, be careful to avoid plagiarism. Plagiarism occurs when someone poses as the originator of words he did not write, ideas he did not conceive, or facts he did not discover. Although you cannot be sued for plagiarizing a public domain work, doing so can result in serious professional and personal penalties. For example, in the case of college professors and journalists, it may result in termination; for students, it could lead to expulsion; if done by well-known historians, it can result in public humiliation.
Ignore Heading – Sub table content Works Protected by Trademark Law Ignore Heading – Sub table contentIt is possible that a work may not be protected by copyright, but is still protected by trademark laws.
EXAMPLEThe gold-colored top of the New York Life building is in the public domain—anyone can photograph it. However, that image also functions as a trademark for the New York Life Insurance Company, and a competing company could not use the image if it would be likely to confuse life insurance consumers.
Ignore Heading – Sub table content Works Protected in Other CountriesBefore 1978, most countries had different periods of copyright protection than the United States. As a result, many works that are public domain in the United States are still protected by copyright in foreign countries and vice versa. Therefore, you may have to research public domain status in each country in which you plan to publish your work.
Compilations Ignore Heading – Sub table contentOften an author creates a work by selecting various public domain components and grouping them together. If the selection, coordination, and arrangement of the material is unique, it will be protected as a copyrightable compilation.
EXAMPLEThe owners of the book Bartlett’s Familiar Quotations selected and arranged famous quotes. Anyone may copy a few quotes from Bartlett’s Familiar Quotations, but no one may copy the selection and arrangement of all the quotes.
Ignore Heading – Sub table content Works First Published Outside the U.S. Ignore Heading – Sub table contentThe copyrights of some works first published outside the United States have been resurrected, removing them from the public domain. As a result of international treaties signed in the 1990s, public domain works that meet certain qualifications are now protected. (For a detailed discussion, see The Copyright Handbook, by Stephen Fishman (Nolo).)
ResourceYou may be able to do some public domain detective work yourself or you can hire private companies or individuals to perform public domain searches for you.
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