USCO Fees Increasing

Starting March 20, 2022, the fees for registrations and other services from the US Copyright Office are going up. You can get the whole story in the Federal Register, here, but it’s a long slog of a read. Here’s the skinny:

There are more changes, but the screenshots above show the ones you are most likely to face.

The good news for photographers is that the fees for group registrations have not changed. The bad news for stock photo agencies is that the database registration for photos has jumped quite a bit ($250!).

Still, no matter how you slice it, registration is still the cheapest “insurance” you can buy.

Details Matter, But…

Legal things are notoriously detail-oriented. Whether you are getting a driver’s license or filing suit, the details are important. Sometimes, the teeniest details can make or break a case. You’ll always hear we attorneys harping on the details, and for good reason.

One of those reasons in my world is that, sometimes, getting the details wrong on a copyright registration can break (void) the registration. I’ve preached for years that you need to be careful with your registrations because certain errors can be so dangerous.

Luckily, near the end of February this year, the US Supreme Court issued its ruling in the Unicolors v H&M copyright case which may save some registrations. In that ruling, the court said, roughly, that an error of fact or of law, as long as it was unknowing, won’t break a registration. That is, the safe harbor under 17 USC §411(b)(1)(A) applies to both mistakes of fact and of law.

Now, here’s the important bit: unknowing. For a mistake to be truly a mistake, you can’t be willfully blind, for example. It won’t do for you to just say “I don’t know what to do so I’ll do whatever and it’ll be okay.” Nope. So, for example, if you have read my blog post about some of the details you need to pay attention to, like not mixing published and unpublished work in a group photo registration, and you don’t bother to check on the publication status of all the photos in a group registration, I would expect that registration could still be voided (at least in part).

So while this ruling is important, it really shouldn’t change how you approach your registrations. You still need to do your best to be accurate. But if you legitimately accidentally aren’t accurate and you sue with a flawed registration, you have a lower chance of being kicked out of court for a voided registration now.

Long Time No See

You may have noticed that I haven’t posted in a while; in almost a year, to be more accurate. I have no excuse other than this: I’m human and it’s been a hell of a year, or two. 

We all have had a hell of a year, or two. 

Professionally, during this time, the most important thing has been my clients. That is, I have been putting all my work energies into taking care of their business, their cases, their needs. My clients will always be my priority when it comes to my professional life; and 2021 ended up being a successful year for many of their matters, happily. But, when they were taken care of, I found I had to devote my energy to taking care of myself and my loved ones. Things like blogging about the law took a lower position. 

Life in the pandemic made everything quotidian much more difficult, turning things like the previous quick runs to the grocery into a bigger, rarer shopping trip, with masks and (at first) gloves and long lines. Everyone had to deal with that, of course. We added in the rearing a Blue Heeler puppy, which is joyful and frustrating in ping-ponging measures, and a general time suck, and totally worth it. 

Mongo Santamaria with Ruth Bader Catzburg

At home, we had the unexpected COVID-related death of my boyfriend’s father and trying to help plan his military burial months later when COVID restrictions permitted. Sadly, he left virtually no specific instructions as to his wishes, despite having a decent estate plan otherwise. I mention the last not to speak ill of the dead but rather, wearing my lawyer’s hat, to ask you to not be like that—please leave instructions in your estate plan for what you want/don’t want for your funeral/memorial—your family will be greatly relieved. On the other side, when someone you love dies, please follow the instructions of the executor (or a lawyer, especially if there is no trust/will) rather than going off on your own and trying to, say, sell their car before the title has been correctly transferred or giving away the deceased’s personal items, even if you think it would be helpful. Yes, we had to deal with that happening, too.

Anyway, whether it was general life stuff or the dog or family or the estate stuff or work, the mental load was more arduous than the physical. Again, this is true for everyone. Also, the political situation here in the USA has added to general stress, and now we’re facing an aggressive Russia, invading Ukraine, for extra yikes. 

So, while I wish I had been better about blogging here, I will say I’m not beating myself up too much about it. I learned shortly after I started law school that taking a step back to make sure that you are taking care of yourself is important. That can mean saying “no” to more things than you expect to or changing your priorities as your life changes. It’s okay to not do everything, in fact, it’s likely better to do less to do it well.

I hope you each take the time to look at what really matters in your life now and set your priories based on that. Be proud of what you have accomplished, especially if you have managed to stay in business during the pandemic, but don’t let your business be the only thing that matters. Be there for your loved ones rather than pushing for that extra buck, too. 

All that being said, I hope to step up and be more active here in the coming days and months. Since my mentor Carolyn Wright shut down her PhotoAttorney blog (to enjoy a well-earned retirement), I feel the need to step into the gap as much as I can.

More Tax Stuff

The IRS announced yesterday that the filing (and payment) date for 2020 taxes has been bumped from the usual April 15 to May 17, 2021. See the IRS’ own post, here.

Importantly, the delay does NOT apply to estimated tax payments. As of this writing, you still have to make your estimated payment on April 15, 2021. Now, that may change, but don’t rely on that possibility: be prepared to pay on the usual date.

Also, it doesn’t apply to state taxes. Check on your own state to see if it has made changes.

Tax Reporting (1099) Changes

While we’ve all been distracted by things like the attempted coup, it seems that there was an important change in tax reporting that you need to be aware of. Many of you have hired independent contractors and have issued 1099MISC forms to report those payments; this year, it’s different.

If you had payments to independent contractors in 2020, more than $600 to anyone, you need to report those on a new form, called 1099-NEC. Here is the IRS flyer with the full information (pdf), but the short answer is that the 1099-NEC must be provided to your vendors by January 31, 2021 and reported to the government by that same date!

If you have been hired as an independent contractor, you should received your 1099-NEC from your client(s) by January 31, 2021 as well.

It gets a bit more squirrel-y when it comes to payments to attorneys: we can get both forms for the money we receive. It just depends on what kind of payment we get–settlement or payment for our fees.

If you paid a settlement, for example, to an attorney on behalf of a claimant, then you need to report that whole amount (“gross proceeds to an attorney”) on the revised 1099MISC in BOX 10 (it used to be box 14). You must also report that whole amount on a 1099-NEC in BOX 3 sent to the claimant! See the bottom of page 2 and top of page 3 of the pdf I linked to above for examples.

However, if you hired an attorney (like me) directly and paid more than $600 in attorney’s fees to that attorney (or firm–even attorney corporations must have their payments reported), you need to report that on the new 1099-NEC in Box 1.

Leave it to the IRS to make an already complicated system even more so. 😉

Oh, and in some states, these changes mean you need to send information to states differently. You should check your own situation, to be sure. The vendor track1099.com has a tool to check, but best to check with the tax authorities in the states involved.

If you have questions about these new processes, you should contact your CPA for best advice.

Ah, the Case Act

Assuming that Trump actually signs the huge bill that includes the CASE Act, something that has not yet happened as I post this (and, knowing how crazy he is, it’s not a for-sure thing he will), the much-touted bill will become law. **UPDATE 12.28.20: he signed**
What does it change in copyright law and what does it mean for the average creator? Here’s my take…

First, the CASE Act changes nothing in existing law except that, before, you absolutely had to have a timely registration to get any statutory damages but you can get some without it under CASE; also, you can file a claim without having your certificate as long as you have filed an application for registration. For statutory damages, if you choose to use the small claims system without a timely registration, you can get very limited ones—up to $7500 per infringement but with a maximum per case of $15,000. That maximum limit means, for example, if one infringer used 3 of your photos, you can’t get more than $15K total, even though 3 x $7500 is more than that. As for the application/registration issue, you can file a small claim as long as you have applied for a registration and that application has not been refused. Under existing law, you must have a certificate in hand (or a refusal) to file suit. Under the CASE Act, if the registration application is later refused, the claim is dismissed but can be re-filed later (for example, if the registration is later fixed and then approved, file again). 

Besides those changes, the existing copyright law is left pretty much as it was, only added to with the small claims system regulations. For example, you can still get actual damages and the infringer’s profits attributable to the infringement in the small claims system, you still own the copyright from the moment of creation, the exclusive rights are still the same, the statute of limitations doesn’t change, etc.

What do you give up if you use the small claims system? Besides procedural things like the number of witnesses, discovery limits, etc., which are all lawyer stuff, really, here are the things people need to know they are giving up if they choose to use the new system:

  • The constitutional right to a jury trial
  • Increased damages for willful infringements
  • Appeal in the regular courts (there are appeal-ish procedures, in the small claims system, but no appeals or re-litigation in regular court)
  • Attorney’s fees, except for bad faith situations (notoriously hard to prove up) and then generally limited to $5000.

Also, you can’t bring claims for CMI removal or false assertion (§1202 claims), in the small claims system. That is a big deal, in my opinion, since you’d be giving up a minimum of $2500 (and up to $25K) per violation, and attorney’s fees, if you chose to use the small claims system. While this may change down the road (the bill requires study of issues in three years, including probably the §1202 one), for now, you have to let go of those claims. That is walking away from money.

Here’s the other thing: any party can opt-out, so you could be throwing away at least $100 (filing fee) and likely more (service costs, etc.) often, as your infringers say, “Nope, I won’t do the small claims court—sue me in regular court if you want to bring a claim!” and there is nothing you can do about it. 

But let’s say the opposing party doesn’t opt-out, and it’s a big enough company that it has in-house counsel or is willing to pay an outside attorney to represent it. If you were planning on going without an attorney, you’re going to get your ass kicked, more often than not. No matter how much the powers-that-be try to simplify the system, copyright lawyers simply know more than you and know how to use that knowledge to make the right kinds of arguments to other legal pros (those making the determinations in the small claims system). That means you’ll have to find counsel. If you can only get a maximum of $7500 and probably no attorney’s fees, it’s going to be much harder to find an attorney to take your matter on contingency or your going to have to pay an hourly rate that’ll eat up your award quickly.

I wrote a lot about how I didn’t like the CASE Act, as a litigator and counsel to copyright plaintiffs, in a post more than 3 years ago. My reasons still hold in regards to its final form, today. But if this is the new reality, I will, of course, work within it. As will we all. 

So, here’s what I still recommend for all creatives: apply for copyright registrations as soon as possible after the creation of your works. Just like before, this is still the best thing to do. Post-CASE, it is even more so. If you have a timely registration (effective date is either before the infringement started or the registration is made within 3 calendar months of the first publication of the work infringed—see here for more), and you choose to use the small claims system, the maximums increase to $15,000 per infringement and $30,000 total per claim. That’s double the amount available if the registration is untimely. 

Most importantly, a timely registration gives you much greater leverage to negotiate a settlement without filing a claim at all because your opponent knows you can file in regular federal court where the maximums are as they have been ($30K non-willful, $150K willful, per infringement and no maximum overall total, possible attorney’s fees). Also, you don’t have to give up your CMI-related claims (which, by the way, are not dependent on timely registration, see more here). When it comes to settlement negotiations, those timely registered factors and the CMI-related ones give a creative a much stronger starting position, which will generally result in more settlements, less litigation, and lower attorney’s fees (contingency fees often go up when any sort of litigation starts). More money in your pockets.

Now I know lots of creatives see the CASE Act as a good thing, and I get where they are coming from. It sounds great and it does open a door to getting some money that didn’t exist before. But I still think the downsides are significant. I also know that when I talk to other copyright lawyers who actually litigate, their positions have been much like my own.

As in all things legal, talk with your own attorney to learn what may be the best for you.

10 Things to Do in Lockdown: Holiday Thanks Edition

2020 has been a shitshow of a year. Many creatives have faced serious hardships, others have been more lucky, but overall, no one has had what they’d likely call a “good year.” Part of what weighs heavily on creatives is that all this mental darkness impedes creation. We all feel stuck, particularly now in the holiday season shut down by all the (necessary!) lockdowns. While there is good news with the vaccines, we’re still in for a few months of dark, and in the middle of winter, to boot.

With all that in mind, I thought I’d share a list of 10 things you can do right now, while we’re still in lockdown-mode, to jump-start the little grey cells into creative thought, or at least to shake off some of the lockdown blues.

  1. Go to an art museum online. Looking at other creative work is usually inspiring for artists and doing this can get your grey cells working on new and fantastic ideas for your own work.
  2. Watch a great visual movie. A film with fantastic direction and/or cinematography can inspire. Maybe you’ll see something that you could try to re-create in your own way, as an homage and a personal project.
  3. Draw something. Even if you’re not a visual artist or think you can’t draw, trying to is great for your creative brain. Do something abstract, or play with color–just make something visual. Doing this analogue is best.
  4. Get a buddy (or a couple) and play Add-A-Line online. To do this, you draw something (a doodle of any kind is fine), then you “hand” it to the next person who adds to it (their “doodle” must connect with yours somehow), then it goes to the next person (or back to you), etc., and you keep at it until the page is filled. I encourage doing this non-digitally as much as possible—that is, draw on paper, scan it, send to the next person who prints it, adds their stuff, scans, sends to the next person…rinse, repeat. 
  5. Try to re-create some art someone else has made. THIS IS NOT FOR YOUR BOOK or any other public medium but rather just an artistic exercise. Don’t be sharing the result with anyone in part because you don’t accidentally want to trod into infringement territory, but mostly because this is a personal, internal exercise. Trying to do what someone else has done will force you to think outside of your own head and open you up to new techniques. This works for musicians and writers just as much as for visual artists. Overall, this can result in new thinking about your own work.
  6. Take an evening walk (masked, of course), or drive if you must, and look at the holiday lights. Walking is highly encouraged because the physicality (exercise) is good for your brain as well. Do this, if possible, with your partner/family/COVID pod people but if you can’t do that, how about facetiming with someone distant while you do this?
  7. Organize a virtual group show. Get colleagues (especially from different disciplines) to all contribute work centered on one theme (like a one-item theme, where every work has to incorporate the same item somehow) and plan a party/opening to show the work. This is a great thing to do with clients too who have their own creativity to show. And it’s easier to do online in many ways (although I also love this in the real world, when possible).
  8. Do something personally scary(ish). Jump out of a plane (with a mask and a parachute, of course) or learn to rock-climb, or ski the hardest slope, or catch-and-release a spider, or give a speech (virtually, for now), whatever. The idea is to face something (reasonable—don’t go completely nuts) that scares the bejesus out of you so that you push your boundaries and vulnerabilities. When you do something that scares you and come out the other side of the process, you learn that you can do more than you know.
  9. Make something in your usual medium, but with some significant limitation–like if you’re a photographer and use multiple lights usually, only permit yourself to use ONE light. Or write a poem without using the letter “e.”
  10. Volunteer somewhere if you can, safely, or at least make a donation. Creative or not, this is a great way to remind yourself how lucky you are. For example, my boyfriend and I have been collecting food from our new neighbors for the local food bank—and we feel like we’re getting all the benefit from it.  

And, in that last item’s vein, this year my “thank you” gifts to my clients and all of you are donations to the AIGA and NPPF, to help creatives hit by COVID, particularly. It’s been a tough year for so many of us—sometimes the best thing we can do is to throw money at the problem. 

Here’s hoping 2021 is as good as 2020 wasn’t. 

On FB/Insta’s Image Manager Tool

Recently, news broke that Facebook, owner of Instagram, is rolling out a new tool to “protect” photos across both platforms. See https://techcrunch.com/2020/09/21/facebooks-new-rights-manager-tool-lets-creators-protect-their-photos-including-those-embedded-elsewhere/ and https://about.fb.com/news/2020/09/helping-creators-and-publishers-manage-their-intellectual-property/. Call me a skeptic, but I’m not jumping for joy at this. While it looks better than nothing, I don’t trust Facebook to do anything that isn’t in its own best interest. More importantly, photographers need to be aware of what they may be losing and what risks they are taking if they use the tool.

My main concern about this new tool is that photographers will use the takedown part of the process too quickly and potentially hurt their ability to get the money they deserve from these infringements. At the very least, before issuing any takedown, photographers should make sure to capture as much evidence about the infringement, including screenshots and metadata, so that if they decide to go after the infringer, they have the proof they need.

Let me back up a bit because I suspect some readers may really understand the purpose of takedown notices and what they mean. That is, many people are not aware that when you send a takedown notice and the work is removed, you can still sue the poster/user for the infringement; you just can’t sue the ISP/platform (probably…there are other requirements the ISP must follow for this safe harbor from liability). Again, after a takedown notice, you can still go after the actual infringer—the person or entity that posted your photo to the platform.

However, to pursue an infringement, you need proof. If you send a takedown notice too quickly, you’ll lose your evidence. So, before doing anything like submitting a takedown notice, make sure to capture all the evidence you can—like screenshots of the use and any metadata you can gather. See my article on evidence gathering for more info. Better yet, talk to an attorney to see what your options are beyond a takedown, before pulling that trigger.

By the way, registering your copyrights before you release your work into the wild is always a good idea. However, you may still have a case even if you haven’t registered the copyright at issue yet. For example, maybe the infringer removed your watermark—that would be a violation of a different part of copyright law that doesn’t require registration for you to be eligible for statutory damages and maybe even attorney’s fees and costs (more on that here).

Worse, however, than losing the evidence needed to pursue the infringement is that if you send a takedown notice too quickly, you may not do the research necessary to make sure that the use is actually an infringement and not excused by fair use or some other defense. If you send a takedown notice without doing that research, you can be sued by the user of your photo for submitting a bad faith takedown notice! If that happens and you lose that suit, you could end up paying the other side’s legal fees. Ouch!

So, if you are still using Facebook or Instagram (and I heartily encourage you not to for many reasons, including the facilitation of the downfall of democracies worldwide), you might consider using this new tool. If you do, take care to use it right.

Copyright Registration Suggestion

I’ve written a lot on the importance of registering your copyrights and, no, this won’t be another nag on that topic. Instead, I want to talk about something you aren’t required to do when you register, but which would be potentially very helpful down the line: make copies of your deposit copy uploads.

Often, an infringement defendant will demand proof that the work was submitted to the USCO as a deposit copy in the registration cited. Now, it’s not the plaintiff’s responsibility to provide that proof[1], particularly if the registration is before or within 5 years of the first publication of the work, but it does help shut up a defendant if you can whip out screenshots of your upload pages along with the works so that they can see, yup, that work was indeed included in the deposit copies submitted to the USCO.

Keeping a folder of everything you submit to the USCO for a registration is a great idea, and if you aren’t doing that yet, start. I suggest you keep copies of the titles list (for group registrations), the actual files submitted, any correspondence you get from the USCO (or send in reply), etc. When you get your certificate, make a scan of it and include the whole thing in that folder, too. Making screenshots of things like the upload page(s) and confirmation(s) takes little time but completes that folder[2]. Then, when the infringer tried its “prove the work is in there” you can not only show the list of title names on the certificate, you can show the work as it was submitted. That’ll shut ’em up… at least on that point.

Basically, the idea is to take away as many of the BS defenses defendants try to assert whenever they’re caught ripping off work. For example, use a proper copyright notice on or adjacent to each work you publish on your website and then no one can claim “innocent infringement” (more on that, here). This “is it in the registration” issue can be a big block with some defendants; removing their ability to claim the work isn’t part of a cited registration can significantly help move negotiations forward.

The more evidence you have to support your claims, the more likely your attorney will be able to negotiate a good settlement for you, so it’s worth the minor effort to make those copies, even if it isn’t your legal responsibility to do so.

______________

[1] This point was again made in the recent Iantosca v Elie Tahari, Ltd. No. 19-CV-04527 (MKV), 2020 WL 5603538 (S.D.N.Y. Sep. 18, 2020) where the court noted “It is the Defendant’s obligation, during discovery, to contact the USCO and request deposit copies to be used to rebut the validity of the copyright registration.”

[2] Remember, when you make the screenshots, the metadata about their creation date, etc., will be in those screenshot files, too. More handy proof in case they try to claim you created the screenshot, nefariously, later (and yes, they might).