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I work at a small company as a software engineer. I have very little knowledge of copyright law, so forgive me for my naïveté.

Recently, my company started filing paperwork and handing over several versions of our application’s source code to a lawyer so that we can… I don’t know, be protected by filing for a copyright? I am not directly involved with the copyright discussions, so my understanding is all secondhand.

Our software uses a 4-part version number:

{major}.{minor}.{autogenerated}.{autogenerated}

The major version is pretty locked in at “2”, while the minor gets manually bumped periodically when new significant features get added.

We were told by the lawyer that if we bump from “2.4…” to “2.5…” that they would have to refile the copyright or whatever, and that just doesn’t quite pass the smell test to me. Is the copyright really that fragile? Do all companies have to pay $2k (what the lawyer quoted us) to refile anytime they want to bump their minor version numbers? Just wondering if y’all can tell me if this is the norm or if we should push back/not worry about “refiling”.

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    I'd guess that that's what the lawyer would charge you... not what the federal government's fees would be. But/and then we'd think they'd want you to do it, so they'd get paid. Jul 29, 2022 at 21:39
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    Does the updated code contain significant amount of the older, copyright registered code? If so a copier if the new code will have also necessarily copied old code. Jul 30, 2022 at 1:12
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    Is something different with regard to bumping the minor version vs the autogenerated designators changing? The event triggering a re-file would be when you want the company to have the same expanded rights for any new/updated code as you have for any code which was previously filed. What triggers that is a business decision, which would typically be based on if you're releasing changes to customers and general level of paranoia about copyright infringement and your company's ability to get statutory damages, but wouldn't actually be triggered by just changing the minor version number.
    – Makyen
    Jul 30, 2022 at 5:28
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    The code has no worth until it is sold. If you would not have been able to find the customers, conduct the sale, maintain the product support infrastructure, develop any existing code or product universe required by your new code, etc., you have absolutely no basis for the claim that you are entitled to the entire sales price of the code instead of your wages. You already sold the code, for the most you could get for it.
    – tbrookside
    Jul 30, 2022 at 15:31
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    @Tvde1 It's not that the version number is embedded in the copyright, it. is literally not the same software. It has been changed. I suspect that having a registered copyright on 90% of the code may be enough, but if you want a registered copyright on 100% of the code, you must register the changes as well.
    – gnasher729
    Aug 1, 2022 at 16:45

5 Answers 5

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I won't reiterate the points already made in David Siegel's and ohwilleke's fine answers about whether paying $2000 to a lawyer for copyright registration (or even filing a copyright registration for your software in the first place) is reasonable, and just assume that you've determined that it is (or, perhaps, have managed to find someone to do it for a more reasonable sum). Instead I'll just focus on your question about whether it's necessary to refile the registration every time the minor version number changes.

The obvious answer to that, of course, is that it isn't — there's nothing magical about that particular number in the version string, and copyright law doesn't know or care anything about version numbers.

However, given that you say that your software's "major" version number is "pretty locked in" and rarely if ever changes, a change to the next component (i.e. the "minor" version number) presumably represents some kind of a significant milestone in the development of the software. Certainly it's a bigger milestone that changes to the last two numbers in the version string, which might well happen several times a day, whereas you're probably only changing the minor version number maybe a couple of times a year. You even say yourself that a change in the minor version number often represents the addition of significant new features to the software.

As such, if you're going to be updating your copyright registration regularly, that indeed seems like a reasonable time to do it. Of course, it's not the only possible choice — for example, you could decide to register the latest version of your software, whatever it happens to be, once a year on some particular date.

Would that make more sense than refiling the registration for every minor version? Maybe. At least it would decouple the copyright registration from the release process and make the annual cost of registration predictable, which could be useful if you're releasing many minor versions each year and you're worried about the cost. Of course, as noted in the other answers, in that case you might want to look into other ways to reduce the cost first.


In any case, having the copyright registration be slightly out of date compared to your release schedule shouldn't be a problem. (And, if it was a problem, you'd have to also update the registration for every patch version you release!) Unless you somehow regularly throw all your old code away and rewrite your whole software from scratch (which would, at a minimum, probably merit a major version number change!), each version of your software will be a derivative of the previous versions and will likely share more than 90% of its code with them.

Thus, if someone were to pirate the latest version of your software, while you only had your copyright registered for an earlier version, you could almost certainly still sue them for infringing your registered copyright on the earlier version, noting that the pirated version was clearly a derivative of and in substantial parts identical to the registered version.

(And of course, as already noted in the comments, copyright is automatic under the Berne Convention and not dependent on registration, although in certain jurisdictions — such as, notably, the United States — registration may be advantageous and even required for certain purposes such as claiming statutory damages.)

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  • The other questions addressed aspects of my question, but this one really addressed my main concern, which was how subsequent versions should be handled after the initial filing. Aug 1, 2022 at 20:36
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The cost of filing a copyright for an updated filing would generally be the same as the original one. The amount of work isn't much different and there are good reasons why every new version of software sold on a large volume commercial basis should always have a new copyright registration for a new version of the software, which are essentially the same reasons you copyright the original version of the software in the first place. As noted by @DavidSiegel in a comment:

A work is protected the moment it is "fixed in tangible form", but one cannot sue for infringement unless the work is already registered under 17 USC 411. Statutory damages, often important, are not available unless the work is registered before the infringement occurs, or within 3 months of publication, under 17 USC 412.

$2,000 is on the high side for the work in the Colorado market where I do most of my work, but it isn't unheard of or terribly beyond the norm. I can think of at least five plausible and defensible reasons for a fairly high charge for a fairly simple job.

This said, sometimes people just charge more than the going rate for work for no good reason, and in a free market, people are allowed to do that, at the risk that someone will go to the competition instead at some point.

One reason: value billing

Many lawyers do that kind of work on a flat fee basis, spreading the significant costs they incur in putting together an efficient system over many cases. They can do the work efficiently but want to charge a rate competitive only with lawyers who aren't so efficient and have to figure things out from scratch each time.

A second possible reasons: diseconomies of scale

Part of what may be going on is that if you have a big bureaucratic law firm, there are significant firm wide costs to every new matter (which, for example, has to be cleared through a conflict check firm-wide and involves quite a few administrative set up costs), especially if the firm charges high hourly rates.

In firms with those kinds of economics, even a project that only takes two hours at $400+ per attorney hour to do the core legal work, would be hard for the firm to make a profit on, because there might easily be $1,200 in anticipated setup and shut down, and tail case monitoring costs.

While some of those costs could, in theory, be streamlined when doing repeat work like the job suggested in the question, large or high cost bureaucratic firms aren't necessarily bothered to provide discounts in those circumstances to repeat customers because they see that kind of job as nickel and dime work that distracts them from working on their core competency of high-end big litigation cases, and big transactions like mergers of medium and large sized companies.

It would probably be possible for a small, more nimble firm that doesn't see this kind of job as a distraction to get the fee for this down to $500-$1000.

This cost issue with small transactional matters is one of the reasons that it is quite common to see the intellectual property department of large firms break off from the large firm bureaucracy (I recall it taking immense efforts just to requisition new office supplies when I worked in one because there was so much red tape involved), to form vastly smaller "boutique" intellectual property speciality law firms (e.g. 5-25 lawyers breaking off from a 100-500+ lawyer law firm) to prevent that kind of cost creep for smaller matters. The economics of high end intellectual property transactional work is different than a lot of big law firm work because a lot of intellectual property transactional work is high volume, low dollar transactions for repeat clients, which makes the friction associated with big law firm bureaucracies outweigh their benefits.

A third possible reason: price for this job doesn't matter much in the context of a larger attorney-client relationship

On the other hand, if you have a big company that normally uses a big inefficient law firm for its work (since most of its legal work involves life or death of the company grade issues where winning is much more important than keeping legal fees to a minimum), and it has a low volume of intellectual property filings, it may be more efficient for that big company to simply pay a bit more than it could if it really tries to get its costs down to a bare minimum, to just continue to use its regular law firm for this bit of work.

The cost of vetting an alternative law firm may not be worth it for a big company. Bidding out the small project might save a few thousand dollars a year of legal fees, but if the big company normally has hundreds of thousands of dollars a year of legal fees anyway, this may not be a big deal for that big company client.

A fourth possible reason: a bigger ability to make malpractice right

Also, keep in mind that if the software has very high economic value, a big part of your $2000 flat legal fee for the work may be paying for the malpractice policy to make the client whole in the unlikely but inevitable event for a screwed up filing that has high stakes to the client in the rare cases where it happens.

For example, I recall a malpractice case my office once handled where a big firm failed to file a key document in the real estate records resulting in a $20 million dollar mortgage losing its priority when the borrower default on the loan made by the client due to a miscommunication between a junior lawyer and a paralegal over who was going to get that job done that resulted in neither person doing it. This resulted in an immense loss to the client (they only recovered about $2 million and would have recovered the full amount if this document had been filed on time as the law firm agreed it would). It doesn't happen often, but it happens.

In the same vein, if your software product generates $20 million a year in revenues and a small, lower charging firm screws up in a way that materially impairs the copyright protection available for that product (e.g. causing statutory damages to be unavailable when large statutory damages would otherwise almost surely have been awarded), a small law firm's malpractice policy and the responsible lawyer's assets may not even begin to cover the harm done, but a big law firm's malpractice policy, which is far more expensive and makes everything that the big law firm does much more expensive to clients, might easily be able to cover that loss.

A fifth possible reason: the lawyer is reluctant to do the work

An alternative explanation is that the lawyer could do the work, but isn't really bothered to do it unless its very lucrative, since the lawyer sees it as a distraction or just doesn't like you as a client.

If this is the reason, then the lawyer is setting a high charge to encourage you to go elsewhere, without saying anything that would cause you to lose face or that would damage the long term lawyer-client relationship in a future case that is bigger or more in the usual vein of the work that the lawyer is looking to do going forward.

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    I follow your reasons why a large law firm might charge so much for a simple task. But I don't see why a firm would use a lawyer at all for filing a copyright registration. The US cpyrit offi has designed forms so that the ordinary author or copyright claimant can use them easily. There do not seem to be any aspects that require legal skill in the process. It seems to me that it would be like hiring a lawyer to fill out one's automobile registration or one's postal change of address. Yes, either might have legal consequences, but a lawyer is simply overkill. Am I missing something? Jul 30, 2022 at 15:56
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    @DavidSiegel I think the idea is that even though it's not technically needed, the desire is to maintain a relationship with the practice. It's a small price to pay for, say, a multi million dollar or billion dollar company to keep a good relationship with a lawyer for rare times when you need him. #3 basically is where I'd see the value but the different reasons all make a perverse sense.
    – WernerCD
    Jul 30, 2022 at 17:16
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    @DavidSiegel You greatly underestimate the capacity of amateurs to screw things up.
    – ohwilleke
    Jul 31, 2022 at 14:49
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    @DavidSiegel if you value your copyright registration at, say, 20k, then you're completely right. If you value it at, say, 200 million, then the math changes and the 2k attorney fee are actually an insurance policy premium. Try finding a 200m insurance policy that covers doing the registration by yourself with less premium. Or bet your 200m on being able to do it without mistakes every single time. The sweet spot is somewhere in between, ofc.
    – DonQuiKong
    Jul 31, 2022 at 14:53
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    @DavidSiegel "either might have legal consequences": compare the legal consequences of an incorrectly completed automobile registration form (some administrative headaches? What would they be, actually?) or postal change of address (mail delivered to the wrong place for a few days or weeks?) to those of improperly registered copyright (inability to claim punitive damages?). Is it really so similar?
    – phoog
    Jul 31, 2022 at 17:15
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The US copyright office fees page shows that a standard copyright application may be filed online for $65. The page about registering other digital content (which includes computer programs) offers a link to the application form. The form is relatively simple, and could be filled out in a few minutes by a non-lawyer. It requires providing the title of the work, and some other info about the work, including any title of a previous version. It requires the year and country of publication, if the work has been published. It requires the name(s) of all author(s). It requires stating whether the work is a work-made-for-hire (as a computer programs created by a company through its employees quite likely would be). It requires the name and nationality of the author, and the author's year of birth if not an organization. It requires information for a contact person. It includes an option to request expedited processing for an additional fee.

I do not see any justification for a charge of $2,000. Indeed I do not see any need to employ a lawyer at all.

Also, if a later version is a derivative work of an earlier version, it may not be needed to register the later version, but it does no harm and may well be of value to the copyright owner.

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    US copyright laws still confuse me, but as far as I know, it's not even necessary to register your work for it to be protected, isn't it?
    – PMF
    Jul 29, 2022 at 20:45
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    @PMF yes, but you can't sue for some sorts of damages, unless it is registered
    – Trish
    Jul 29, 2022 at 21:04
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    @PMF Yes and No. A work is protected the moment it is "fixed in tangible form", but one cannot sue for infringement unless the work is already registered under 17 USC 411. Statutory damages, often important, are not available unless the work is registered before the infringement occurs, or within 3 months of publication, under 17 USC 412 Jul 29, 2022 at 21:07
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    @pschill you can always sue for actual damages, and/or other, non-monetary remedies
    – Caleth
    Jul 30, 2022 at 10:08
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    @pschill Caleth is correct. Also when an infringer creates a derivitive work wirthout permission, s/her gets no copyright on the dereivitive work at all, instead of the limited rights that the creator of a derivitive work with permission gets. Jul 30, 2022 at 15:21
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I assume there's no version control between different copyright applications. So, once you've decided to refile, it doesn't really matter for the lawyer or for the government whether it's a minor version change or an unrelated work of literary fiction. Every bit in that folder is getting filed.

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Just designate someone in your company to do it. Copyrights are easy. Now if you were discussing patents... there is a lot more to it and you can either find a patent attorney who does it at reasonable money or for shares, or invest significant time handling it yourself. Also, in the case of patents there are specialists who help write the patents for you. They are a hell of a lot cheaper and then you only need use the patent attorney for the filing and follow up. But copyrights? Using an attorney is just plain silly.

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    – user35069
    Aug 6, 2022 at 20:10
  • I am not talking about patents, but thank you. Aug 8, 2022 at 12:27

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