Austin Copyright Attorneys & Lawyers
How it Works
Ross Brandborg
Richard Eldredge
Jake Siciliano
Richard Gora
Michael Wieser
Brig Ricks
Charlton Messer
Ken Emanuelson
Christopher Cyrus
Jarad Dickinson
Austin Copyright Lawyers
Why use UpCounsel to hire a Austin Copyright Attorney?
Average experience
You always get experienced professionals and high caliber work.
Faster
Your work gets done quickly because professionals are always available.
More cost effective
We use technology to cut traditional overhead and save you thousands.
UpCounsel has been talked about in:
Legal Services Offered by Our On-Demand Austin Copyright Attorneys
Our Austin copyright attorneys & lawyers can help you register a copyright for your original work of authorship. This will ensure that you have documented proof of your copyright ownership. Because, if you don't file it, you can't sue if someone uses your work.
Once registered, the copyright lawyer you chose can also assist you with the development of licensing and/or distribution agreements so you can collect royalties on your original work of authorship. The copyright attorneys & lawyers on UpCounsel represent entrepreneurs, musicians, actors, artists, TV producers, and authors. Our Austin copyright attorneys can also assist you with fighting copyright infringement in the case a party infringes on any of your copyrights, as they'll seek to prevent it and seek damages from any and all infringers. Many attorneys also have expertise in defending clients against claims of infringement.
There are three types of copyright: usage, full, and unique. Usage means the buyer gets to use the article one time, but the writer can use it again or resell it. Full rights will give the buyer all rights; they can even place their name on the article, saying they wrote it. Your copyright attorney can explain further details about the different kinds of copyright.
Copyright ©, the least expensive form of protection, means literally "the right to copy" an original creation. Original works of authorship include: Movies, drawings, books, works of art, music, textile and jewelry designs, photographs, lyrics, computer programs, paintings, architectural works, including blue prints and maps.
Improve Your Legal ROI with Affordable Copyright Attorneys that service Austin, TX.
What Our Customers Have to Say
"UpCounsel gives me access to big-firm lawyers minus the big-firm price tag. I work with several attorneys on the platform and there are never surprises...I always receive quality legal work at competitive rates that larger firms simply cannot match."
"Every startup needs to know about UpCounsel. We found great attorneys at great prices and were able to focus our resources on improving our business instead of paying legal bills."
"Before UpCounsel it was hard for us to find the right lawyer with the right expertise for our business. UpCounsel solves those problems by being more affordable and helping us find the right lawyer in no time."
Related Articles
How to Register a Trademark
- 10 min read
How Do You Register a Trademark?
Registering a trademark, which protects a phrase, logo, symbol, design, domain name, or other word that is associated with your business, requires filing an application with the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO). A trademark typically applies to a product, while a service mark typically refers to an available service. Using a service mark indicates that all services with that protected mark come from the same company or source. Before you file the application, you should perform a thorough search of existing registered trademarks
...
Read MoreTrademark Colors
- 4 min read
What Are Trademark Colors?
Trademark colors are the specific shades and hues registered to a particular brand.
Why Trademark Colors Matter
Colors can make people think or feel a certain way about a product. A color can be associated with products in a literal or an abstract way to produce certain psychological effects. Blue, for example, can be used for frozen, cool products, while green is often used for healthy or organic choices. Certain colors can be considered to work together or be particularly aesthetically pleasing. Green and yellow are closely related, so they appear to be harmonious. Vibrant and eye-catching colors can produce certain visual effects. Some colors grab the audience's attention right away
...
Read MorePatent Law
- 8 min read
Patent Law: What Is It?
Patent law is part of intellectual property law and controls what inventions qualify for patents, the patent application process, and how patent infringement is handled.
If you want to get legal protection for your inventions, you should understand the basics of patent law. It may also benefit you to have some knowledge of overall intellectual property law, the background of patent law, what requirements an invention must meet before it qualifies for a patent, and some of the issues that make patent law difficult to navigate.
What Is a Patent?
A patent is a property right that gives an inventor the legal abilit
...
Read MoreTrademark Counterfeiting
- 12 min read
What Is Trade Counterfeiting?
Trademark counterfeiting refers to when an established trademark is placed on a product or service that is not one of the legitimate goods offered by the trademark owner. The federal Trademark Act, also called the Lanham Act, prohibits such counterfeiting.
In the United States, counterfeiting laws are becoming more and more favorable for those who own trademarks. Case law is growing substantially when it comes to the 1984 amendment to the trademark counterfeiting provisions of the Lanham Act. Owners of trademarks in the United States can depend on the law to help protect their marks from counterfeiters.
...
Read MoreCommon Law Trademark Search
- 7 min read
Updated November 12, 2020:
What Is a Common Law Trademark Search?
A common law trademark search is the most comprehensive trademark search that a company can conduct. It involves searching through databases, news, business, and public records, legal and financial records. Your goal in a common law trademark search is to find out if someone is using a similar trademark, even if the mark isn't registered in the Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) database.
Registered Trademarks vs. Common Law T
...
Read More