free sco unix

C. P. Ghost cpghost at cordula.ws
Sat Jun 18 13:28:27 UTC 2011


On Sat, Jun 18, 2011 at 12:02 AM, Robert Bonomi
<bonomi at mail.r-bonomi.com> wrote:
> I'ts _MUCH_ simpler, to just sign and date a copy of the work, and have a
> notary public 'witness' the signature.

True.

Without the service of a public registry of copyrighted works that (I think)
only the US offers, and when you need a legally binding "official stamp" of
some sort, you can go to a registered public notary. They're mildly expensive
though; certainly a lot more expensive than the US Copyright Office fees.

But if your work doesn't consist of too many pages, you can also get a
dated and signed stamp on each one at your local city hall / administration.
They call that kind of service a "certified copy" or "copy certification."
Bear in mind though, that each page of your work has to be stamped, and
the fee paid for extra. For small page counts, that's okay, but try this with
a 1,000 pages work, and you'll quickly find out that it's less expensive to
use a public notary, even though they charge more.

Actually, it's a shame that other countries DON'T offer the ease of official
copyright registration (for a comparatively low fee) like the US does with
the Copyright Office. That's one of the things the US did right (irrespective
of what we think of the benefits and evils of Copyright law in general and
their endless extensions towards perpetual copyright in particular).

-cpghost.

-- 
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