Protecting Your Creative Ideas

Entertainment attorney Barry Neil Shrum has posted on his blog, Law on the Row, a reasoned and well-researched piece about how to protect creative ideas when submitting them to a third party. His law practice is located on the famous Music Row in Nashville Tennessee. Barry's article elicited some positive comments and prompted Ron Coleman, a well-regarded trademark and copyright attorney in New York, to join the conversation with a thoughtful response at Likelihood of Confusion that clarifies a few points in Barry's post.

Recommending these blog posts by Barry Neil Shrum and Ron Coleman to our readers, we'd add one important point that was not discussed by them but that is often key to protecting creative ideas. It's always a good idea to protect your unpublished ideas in the Creative Registry before disclosing them to third parties, especially other singer/songwriters!

The IP.com Creative Registry is a web-based registry that allows you to upload your documents and creative work for legal safeguarding. IP.com digitally fingerprints and date-stamps your work while placing it into a private archive for your personal access. IP.com then publishes the fingerprint and date into the public domain as a testament to the existence of your work. Your actual document is NEVER exposed to anyone else, yet you have irrefutable proof of its content at the precise time it was safeguarded!
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