At present, copyright is ‘automatic’. From the moment an original work is
created, the author enjoys all the benefits that copyright protection entails,
without the need to complete a registration, deposit the work, mark it with a
copyright notice, or comply with any other statutorily prescribed formality.
However, the digital revolution has caused a paradigm shift in the way
copyright-protected works are created and consumed. Copyright law is now
facing significant challenges arising from the need to establish legal
certainty over copyright claims, improve rights clearance, and enhance the
free flow of information. Inevitably, proposals to introduce formalities in
copyright law (or reintroduce them, as the absence of formalities has not
always been the norm) have risen to prominence in legal debate.
This book examines whether reintroducing copyright formalities is legally
feasible. Based on a comprehensive and thorough analysis of copyright
formalities, it sets out to establish the extent to which the current
copyright system allows for their reintroduction. To this end, the author
describes the role and functions of formalities, revisits the history of
formalities at the national and international levels, examines the scope of
the international prohibition on formalities, and scrutinizes the rationales
behind this prohibition, including an in-depth examination of the validity of
the argument that copyright is a ‘natural right’ and therefore should be
protected independently of formalities.
The author skilfully evaluates and contrasts the conflicting theories
according to which formalities, on the one hand, add legal certainty to claims
on the ownership of property, and, on the other, hamper individual authors
from seeking adequate protection for their works. This book makes an important
contribution to legal science by answering questions that so far have been
neglected or only marginally addressed. To the degree that current copyright
law permits reintroducing formalities, the author posits the specifications
that will determine to a great extent what role and functions they may
eventually fulfil: depending on the aims to be achieved, lawmakers must choose
which types of formalities shall be imposed, and what their legal consequences
shall be. This book goes a long way towards reinforcing the foundation for
those decisions.
Acknowledgements. List of Abbreviations. 1. Introduction. 2. The
Role and Functions of Formalities in Intellectual Property Law. 3. The
History of Formalities in National Copyright Law. 4. The Prohibition on
Formalities in International Copyright Law. 5. Contextualizing the
International Prohibition on Copyright Formalities. 6. Relativizing the
Legal-Theoretical Concerns with Copyright Formalities. 7. Summary and
Conclusion. Bibliography. Index.