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Oct 2018

I plan to publish a long-term webcomic soon and I need to know if it should be copyrighted or if it's good enough without being pubilshed.

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    Oct '18
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    Nov '18
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If you live in the US your comic is automatically copyrighted to you unless you specifically sign away those rights. You can file a copyright too if you want which will make it easier to defend in court if you need to do that. That said the odds of someone stealing your webcomic are very low.

Other countries will have different rules, so if you're not in the US you should look up the specific laws in your country.

I agree with kytri. I copyright each edition of my web comic, just in case the work that I upload to different web sites and save on files all of a sudden becomes lost. This might be caused by a virus, breaking web site rules, defective usb flash drives, or hacked accounts. I don't think that It will hurt to get as much security as possible. You might be producing a real gem that someone might try to claim as their own one day.

That's what I've figured. I don't even risk anything these days because of how bad and I mean BAD my luck has been the last few years. I will definitely buy one. Btw, where do I buy a copyright?

I'll add a little to the good advice listed above. Whether or not you want copyright depend what you intend to with the project that you create. I released first two books with Creative Commons licenses and encourage others to take whatever they like. If you are asking the question, then you are probably concerned about predicting your intellectual property from theft. Nobody is going around stealing webcomics and making bank off them, but if it makes you feel at ease, go ahead and and file a copyright application. You've got nothing to lose but thirty bucks.

Copyrights in the U.S. are awarded automatically now at the instant of publication. Filing a copyright simply means that you are documenting your copyright. Most nations adhere to the Berne Treaty so their rules work similarly to those in the U.S. with the big exception being that copyrights last longer in the U.S. than in those other countries. China does not recognize any foreign laws regarding intellectual property.

Copyright is not to be confused with trademark. Trademark law exists to prevent others from creating counterfeit products similar your own products and tricking the consumer into thinking that they are the same thing. Apple Computers has used trademarks to stop others from using certain colors computer cases and even from using the word "pod" in website names. You could trademark the name and logo of your webcomic if you wanted. Trademarks are NOT granted automatically.

9 days later

That is the best answer I could've ever got. Thank you so much :smiley: