Can a Copyright Transfer Agreement be Terminated?

Answer

  • Under certain circumstances, the Copyright Act allows authors or their heirs to terminate an agreement that transferred or licensed the author’s copyright to a third party after thirty-five years.
  • To terminate a grant, the author or the author’s heirs must serve an advance written “notice of termination” on the grantee or the grantee’s successor-in-interest and must record a copy of that notice with the Copyright Office and pay the required filing fee.
  • A notice of termination must be recorded before the effective date of termination specified in the notice.
    • If a notice of termination is not recorded in a timely manner, the notice will be invalid, and the author or the author’s heirs will not be able to terminate the agreement.
  • For more information, see chapter 2300, section 2310 of the Compendium of U.S. Copyright Office Practices.

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  • Last Updated Sep 05, 2023
  • Views 3
  • Answered By Roger Weaver

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