Eric W. Cernyar, Colorado Springs, CO

Practice Areas

Patent Matters
Trademark Matters
Copyright Matters
IP Agreements
Employee IP Issues
Trade Secrets
Unfair Competition
Patent Litigation
Other Litigation
Internet Law




Trademark Services in the Colorado Springs Area

Services on Copyright Matters

»   Prepare and file copyright applications.
»   Prepare copyright licenses and assignments
»   Conduct infringement analyses
»   Counsel on fair use, public display and performance, and distribution issues
»   Counsel on ownership, work-for-hire, joint authorship, and first sale doctrine issues
»   Counsel on vicarious liability issues (e.g., when are parents responsible for a child's unauthorized music downloads?)
»   Evaluate whether software, including source code, is infringing
»   Copyright litigation

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a copyright?

  • A copyright protects an original work of authorship that is fixed in a tangible medium of expression

  • Copyrights protect literary, musical, pictorial, sculptural, audio, visual, architectural, dramatic, and choreographic works. These categories are broadly construed. For example, computer source code is considered a “literary” work, and is copyrightable.

  • Copyrights protect expression, not inventions, functions, principles, discoveries, ideas, and the like.

  • Copyrights protect “works of authorship,” not titles, names, slogans, and short phrases.

  • A “tangible medium of expression” can be a piece of paper, a canvass, a video tape, a disc, hard drive, a memory chip, or any other medium for fixing, storing, or recording a work of authorship.

How do I obtain a copyright?

By creating an original work of authorship and fixing it to a tangible medium of expression

What are some of the benefits of federal copyright registration?

  • Registration establishes a public record of your copyright and provides you with a certificate of registration.

  • If registered within five (5) years of publication, registration provides prima facie evidence that the work is original and owned by the registrant.

  • Registration is a prerequisite to filing a copyright infringement suit.

  • Registration provides the owner with a broader array of available remedies in federal court for infringement, including statutory damages (which can eliminate the need to prove actual damages, which can be difficult), and attorneys’ fees. Generally, unless an application is filed within three months of publication, you cannot recover statutory damages or attorneys fees for an infringement that occurred prior to registration. 17 U.S.C. § 412.


Licensed by the Supreme Court of Colorado and the Supreme Court of Texas.
Admitted to practice in the Federal District Courts of Colorado, the Western, Eastern, and Southern Districts of Texas,
the Fifth and Federal Circuit Courts of Appeals, and the United States Supreme Court.
Also registered to practice before the United States Patent and Trademark Office

This web site is designed for general information only.
The information presented at this site should not be construed to be formal legal advice
or communications forming a lawyer-client relationship.

Website designed and approved by Eric W. Cernyar
© 2007 Eric W. Cernyar.