Your Guide to your Copyright Licensing Agreement

By pdelray at 6 August, 2010, 12:00 am

There are many terms and stipulations that may be included in a copyright licensing agreement. Copyright licensing declares those stipulations that any person other than the original registered creator has to follow if they want to use content that you have registered and copyrighted. One of the terms you will see in your copyright licensing agreement is Licensor. This is the person who owns the rights to a work. You are also going to see the term Licensee, which refers to the person or people who want to use your protected content. You have to make sure you have a legitimate, legal copyright license to protect your rights and royalties of your works from other people who will try to plagiarize from you. The copyright licensing agreement sets the terms describing how you will let another party use or reuse your work in exchange for profit or royalties.

You have to make sure that any and all agreements you file details exactly the materials in question that can or cannot be used and how exactly they can or cannot be used. For example, if you want to allow someone to make copies of the sheet music but not perform it that would have to be stated. If you have several works that you want to protect, you have to state if a person or party is going to be able to use all of those works or just specific ones. You also have to specify how a person can use allowed works in your copyright licensing agreement. Are they going to be able to use the works online or just in certain other niches like in manuals?

You also need to consider if you will allow your works to be agreed upon to grant exclusive rights to the licensee or non exclusive rights. This basically means that the licensee can or cannot grant similar rights to other parties. If they will be allowed to grant rights to other people, this should mean a bigger slice of royalty pie for you, since your work is being more widely used.

In exchange for the rights to use your material that you worked so hard on, the other party has to make royalty payments to you, which of course also needs to be stated in your agreement. This all depends on the nature of the work that is covered. You should consider if you want to be paid a percentage of sales or a flat amount, what rights you will have to look over the work and change it and how often you are going to be paid. You want to make sure that you get the full amount of royalty you deserve. Many people agree to a certain percentage of the profits when it comes to copyright licensing agreements.

To know more about copyright licensing agreement, please visit our website http://www.copyrightstoday.com

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