Copyright Notice
A copyright notice is a label placed on a work to identify claimed copyright ownership, usually using the © symbol, the owner’s name, and the year of first publication. In most countries, and under the Berne framework, copyright protection is automatic, so a notice can help with clarity and warning, but it is generally not required to create copyright protection.
Quick facts line:
Also called: copyright marking, copyright label, copyright statement
Applies to: articles, books, websites, videos, graphics, music packaging, downloadable files, and other published works
Used for: identifying claimed ownership and publication details
Not the same as: copyright registration, a license, or proof that every included element is cleared.
Example:
A blog page footer might say “© 2026 Audiodrome.” A fuller notice on a published work might include the © symbol, the owner’s name, and the year of first publication, such as “© 2026 John Doe,” which is the basic form described by the U.S. Copyright Office.
Gotchas:
- A copyright notice is not the same as registration. The U.S. Copyright Office says placing a notice on a work is not a substitute for registration.
- For works first published on or after March 1, 1989, use of a notice is optional under U.S. law. For certain older U.S. publications, notice used to be mandatory.
- Sound recordings can use a different notice format. U.S. law provides for the ℗ symbol for notices on phonorecords of sound recordings, separate from the ordinary © notice.
- A notice can show who is claiming copyright, but it does not prove that all rights are validly owned, transferred, or cleared. I cannot confirm ownership from notice alone without the underlying chain of title or agreement. This is an inference based on the Copyright Office’s distinction between notice and registration/ownership formalities.
FAQs
Related terms
Work Made for Hire • Public Domain • Rights Clearance • License Terms • Proof Workflow • Copyright Claim

