Protecting Intellectual Property Makes You Money

Intellectual Property

Written by Clark Proffitt

May 10, 2023

I’ve really enjoyed watching the newest season of Stranger Things. Like a lot of people watching the show, I really love the Kate Bush song they use in the soundtrack. It just feels perfect for what Max was going through in the show and it’s honestly kind of a banger.

So I was thrilled when this notice came up in my Facebook feed (I’m a middle aged lawyer, yes I’m still on Facebook). Unlike a lot of artists, Kate Bush managed to keep the publishing and licensing rights to her music, so she, and not her label, is raking in all the money from the song’s renewed popularity. I literally enjoy listening to it on my streaming service more knowing that she’s getting that check.

If you’re an artist creating new material, be careful with your IP rights. The copyright in your works will outlive you by 70 years under law. When your creation gets picked up by whatever technology we’re using then to keep us entertained and introduces you to a new generation you don’t want someone else to get paid for it.

AI and Copyright Law: Complete Guide to the U.S. Copyright Office Report on Artificial Intelligence

AI and Copyright Law: Complete Guide to the U.S. Copyright Office Report on Artificial Intelligence

The U.S. Copyright Office released a multi-part AI report in 2024-2025. Part 1 addresses digital replicas, Part 2 covers AI-generated content copyrightability. Key finding: only human-authored works qualify for copyright protection. Purely AI-generated content from prompts cannot be copyrighted, but AI can assist human creativity without affecting copyright eligibility.

You May Also Like…

Get In Touch!

 

Book an Appointment Now

With one of our Attorneys!

*By providing your telephone number and submitting this form you are consenting to be contacted by SMS text message. Message & data rates may apply. You can reply STOP to op-out of further messaging.