IP Law For All

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Location: Chicago, Illinois

I am an IP attorney and registered patent attorney. My IP firm, located in downtown Chicago, handles all major intellectual property matters, from patent, trademark and copyright searches and applications, through litigation. See firm profile at www.noreklaw.com

Saturday, November 04, 2006

Hyperlinking

Hyperlink only with permission granted.

Most website pages have content protected by copyright. Facts embodied in content are not subject to copyright protection, while the authorship is. Via copyright protection, the copyright holder has the exclusive right to make copies of the work and to distribute copies of the work, among other exclusive rights.

Hyperlinking to another's website, particularly to an internal page within the website, is probably a distribution of a copy of a protected work without permission.

On the practical level, some website owners have a strong preference for site-entry through the pages it selects.
Even websites operated by departments and agencies of the federal government want hyperlinkers to clearly advise users that the link leads to a government page, and not one of their own.

Hyperlinking to a website's entry page is still an issue in flux. Most website owners want the publicity, or we wouldn't be out on the Internet. Delighted with some of such hyperlinks, but not comfortable with others. The jury is still out.

More info on copyrights at the U.S. Copyright Office's official website www.copyright.gov and on my website www.noreklaw.com

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