Copyright Licensing: Six Rights, One Written Rule, and Termination



Copyright licensing divides the six exclusive rights under the Copyright Act, and exclusive licenses require a signed writing to be valid.

A copyright is not a single right. It is a bundle of six legally distinct exclusive rights under 17 U.S.C. § 106, and each of those rights can be licensed separately, to different parties, for different purposes, in different territories, for different durations.

A musician can license the right to reproduce a composition to a record label, the right to perform it publicly to a streaming service, and the right to create derivative works to a film producer, all simultaneously, without any of those grants conflicting. That divisibility is what makes copyright licensing commercially powerful. It is also what makes copyright licensing legally complex, because each grant is a separate legal instrument, each exclusive grant requires a signed writing to be enforceable, and the author may have the right to terminate every one of those grants beginning 35 years after they were made.

Copyright licensing is governed by the Copyright Act of 1976, particularly 17 U.S.C. § 106, which enumerates the six exclusive rights that copyright owners hold; 17 U.S.C. § 204(a), which requires that any transfer of copyright ownership, including an exclusive license, be accomplished by a signed writing sufficient to identify the rights transferred; 17 U.S.C. § 203, which grants authors and their heirs the right to terminate grants of copyright made on or after January 1, 1978, during a five-year window that generally opens 35 years after the grant was executed; 17 U.S.C. § 115 and the Music Modernization Act of 2018 at Pub. L. 115-264, which establish a compulsory mechanical license for musical compositions; and 17 U.S.C. § 512, which provides safe harbor protections for online service providers who receive and respond to takedown notices from copyright owners.

Contents


1. What Copyright Licensing Covers and How the Six Rights Are Divided and Granted


Copyright licensing begins with understanding which of the six exclusive rights the licensor holds, which rights the licensee needs, and whether any right has already been transferred to another party.

The six exclusive rights under § 106 are the right to reproduce the work in copies or phonorecords, the right to prepare derivative works, the right to distribute copies or phonorecords to the public, the right to perform the work publicly, the right to display the work publicly, and for sound recordings specifically, the right to perform the work publicly by means of a digital audio transmission. Each right is independently transferable. A licensor can grant an exclusive license to distribute a novel in print while retaining the right to license the same work for digital distribution, audio recording, and adaptation into a screenplay to different parties. The license agreement must specify precisely which rights are being granted, in which medium or format, in which territory, and for which duration, because an ambiguity in the scope of a copyright license tends to be construed against the licensor in some jurisdictions and against the licensee in others.

The distinction between exclusive and non-exclusive copyright licenses determines both the transferability of the license and the remedies available when the work is infringed. An exclusive license transfers a specific exclusive right or portion of a right to the licensee for the duration of the license, making the licensee the owner of that right and giving the licensee standing to sue for infringement of the licensed right. A non-exclusive license gives the licensee permission to exercise a right without preventing the licensor from granting the same permission to others, and a non-exclusive licensee generally cannot sue for copyright infringement independently. Mapping the rights needed before the license is negotiated matters because later rights clearance is often more expensive and sometimes impossible.

Exclusive Right (17 U.S.C. § 106)What It CoversCommon License Uses
ReproductionCopying the work in any formatPublishing; recording; printing; digital download
Derivative worksTranslations; adaptations; sequels; arrangementsFilm adaptations; translations; sampling
DistributionSelling or lending copies to the publicRetail; digital distribution; streaming libraries
Public performanceLive performance; broadcast; streamingConcert rights; radio; streaming services
Public displayShowing the work to the publicGallery exhibitions; website display; advertising
Digital audio transmissionStreaming sound recordingsSatellite radio; internet radio; streaming platforms


What Exclusive Copyright Licenses Require and How the Written Transfer Rule Works


Section 204(a) of the Copyright Act requires that any transfer of copyright ownership, including an exclusive license, be accomplished by a signed writing. The writing may be a formal agreement or another signed note or memorandum sufficient to identify the rights transferred. An oral exclusive license is not enforceable regardless of the parties' intent or the price paid.

The signed writing requirement is strictly applied. Courts have held that an unsigned email, an invoice, or an internal memorandum that reflects the parties' understanding of an exclusive license does not satisfy § 204(a) unless it was signed by the copyright owner. The writing must come from the owner of the rights being transferred, not from the licensee. A licensee who signs and returns a written agreement, but whose copy was never countersigned by the licensor, may face a challenge to the exclusivity of the license when a dispute arises.

Non-exclusive licenses, by contrast, do not require a writing to be enforceable. An oral non-exclusive license can be implied from the circumstances, including a course of dealing, a payment, and the licensor's delivery of the work with knowledge of the intended use. An implied non-exclusive license is limited to the scope the circumstances from which it was implied support, and any use that exceeds the implied scope is infringement. Given the ambiguity that oral and implied licenses create, written agreements with clearly defined scope, territory, duration, and royalty terms are advisable for all copyright licenses regardless of exclusivity.



2. How Work for Hire Changes Copyright Ownership before Any License Is Needed


Work for hire is not a license. It is an ownership rule that determines who holds the copyright in the first instance, before any license or transfer can occur.

Section 101 of the Copyright Act defines work made for hire in two distinct categories. The first covers works prepared by an employee within the scope of employment: under § 201(b), the employer is the author and owner of the copyright from the moment the work is created, with no assignment or license required. Whether a creator is an employee for this purpose is determined by the common law of agency, considering factors including the hiring party's control over the work, the skill required, where the work is done, and whether the hiring party provides tools and sets the schedule. A software developer hired as a full-time employee who writes code within the scope of employment has no copyright in that code.

The second category covers nine specific types of commissioned works: contributions to collective works, parts of motion pictures or other audiovisual works, translations, supplementary works, compilations, instructional texts, tests, answer material for tests, and atlases. A commissioned work in one of these nine categories is work made for hire only if the parties have a written agreement signed by both expressly designating the work as work made for hire. Without that signed written agreement, the commissioned creator retains the copyright even if paid for the work. The safest practice is to sign the work-made-for-hire agreement before creation begins. If the agreement is signed after the work has been created, the arrangement may be treated as an assignment rather than a work-for-hire designation, or may create timing disputes, depending on the facts and governing precedent.



How Compulsory Licenses and Music Rights Organizations Cover Specific Content Categories


Music licensing requires separating rights in the musical composition from rights in the sound recording, because these are distinct copyrights owned by different parties and licensed through different channels.

The Section 115 mechanical license allows anyone who wants to record and distribute a cover version of a musical composition to do so without the copyright owner's consent, provided the composition has been publicly distributed with the owner's permission, the new version does not alter the basic melody or fundamental character, and the statutory royalty rate set by the Copyright Royalty Board is paid. The Music Modernization Act of 2018 created the Mechanical Licensing Collective to administer Section 115 licenses for digital distribution, consolidating a previously fragmented system. A streaming use may require composition performance rights, mechanical rights for the composition, and sound recording rights through different licensing channels, and each layer of rights must be cleared independently.

Performance rights organizations including ASCAP, BMI, and SESAC hold blanket licenses for public performance of musical compositions in their repertoire. Sound recording performance rights for digital transmission are a separate layer, administered by SoundExchange under the statutory digital audio transmission framework under § 106(6). Before any public performance or digital distribution license is sought, the parties must identify which right, which work, and which organization controls the use, because a license for composition performance does not cover the sound recording, and neither covers the right to reproduce or distribute copies of the work.


Copyright registration is not required for a copyright to exist, and under the Berne Convention, copyright attaches automatically to an original work of authorship fixed in a tangible medium of expression. But registration with the U.S. Copyright Office has significant practical consequences in litigation. Fourth Estate Public Benefit Corp. .. Wall-Street.com, 586 U.S. 296 (2019), held that a copyright owner generally may not file an infringement action until the Copyright Office has acted on the application by registering or refusing registration. Beyond the filing requirement, 17 U.S.C. § 412 provides that statutory damages and attorney's fees are not available for infringement that began before registration unless the work was registered within three months of first publication. A copyright owner who licenses a work without registering it has not lost any rights, but has limited the remedies available in infringement litigation to actual damages and profits, which are often difficult to prove. Registering works before licensing or at the earliest possible stage preserves the full remedial toolkit, including statutory damages of up to $150,000 per work for willful infringement.



3. What the Section 203 Termination Right Is and Why Every Author Must Track the Window


Section 203 of the Copyright Act gives authors, or their statutory heirs after the author's death, the right to terminate any grant of copyright made by the author on or after January 1, 1978, during a five-year window that opens 35 years after the grant was executed.

Section 203 generally allows termination during a five-year window beginning 35 years after the grant was executed. If the grant includes the right of publication, the effective window may begin 35 years after publication under the grant or 40 years after execution, whichever comes earlier. This exception means that grants covering publication rights can open their termination windows earlier than the basic 35-year rule suggests, and authors who hold publication-right grants must calculate the window from the correct starting point to avoid missing it. The termination right is inalienable. No contract provision can waive it, no agreement made at the time of the grant can defeat it, and no subsequent agreement between the author and the licensee can prospectively surrender it.

Works made for hire are not subject to termination because the employer was always the author under the statute, and foreign rights that fall under foreign law rather than the Copyright Act are similarly excluded. The termination right has generated significant litigation in the music industry, where artists who signed contracts decades ago have begun reclaiming rights with substantial current commercial value. A recording artist who signed over all rights in their catalog to a major label in 1980 can begin to reclaim those rights under § 203, regardless of what the original contract states.



How to Exercise Termination Rights and What Happens after Termination


Exercising the § 203 termination right requires serving written notice within the five-year window and recording that notice with the Copyright Office before the effective termination date.

Notice must be served not less than two and not more than ten years before the intended termination date, and the notice must be recorded with the U.S. Copyright Office before the effective termination date. Authors who do not track these deadlines miss termination windows that cannot be reopened. The five-year window will not pause, extend, or reopen because the author was unaware of it, and a missed window is a permanently lost opportunity to reclaim rights regardless of their current commercial value.

After termination becomes effective, ownership of the terminated rights reverts to the author or the author's statutory heirs. Derivative works prepared under the original grant before termination may continue to be exploited under the terms of the original grant, but no new derivative works may be created using the original work after termination without the author's new authorization. Copyright infringement lawsuit and copyright settlement practice in termination disputes requires calculating the notice deadline from the correct starting date, serving notice through proper channels, and recording it with the Copyright Office before the window closes.



How Fair Use and DMCA Safe Harbors Intersect with Copyright Licensing


Fair use and the DMCA safe harbor together define the outer boundaries of copyright licensing by identifying the circumstances under which use of a copyrighted work requires no license, either because fair use applies or because the online platform is shielded from liability.

Fair use under 17 U.S.C. § 107 is a statutory exception that permits use of copyrighted works without authorization for purposes including criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research, evaluated through four non-exclusive factors: the purpose and character of the use including whether it is transformative and commercial; the nature of the copyrighted work; the amount and substantiality of the portion used; and the effect of the use on the potential market for the original. A use that is transformative, takes only what is necessary for the transformative purpose, and does not substitute for the original in the marketplace is more likely to qualify as fair use. Courts assess fair use on a case-by-case basis, and the unpredictability of that assessment is one reason licensors prefer negotiated agreements over reliance on fair use.

The DMCA safe harbor under 17 U.S.C. § 512 protects online service providers from copyright infringement liability for user-uploaded content when the provider lacks knowledge of the infringement, does not financially benefit from it, and responds expeditiously to takedown notices. The safe harbor is not a license: it is an immunity for the platform, not a right for the user who uploaded the infringing content. A copyright owner whose work is uploaded without authorization can send a takedown notice under § 512(c)(3), and if the platform complies, the platform retains its safe harbor status even though the user's upload was infringing. DMCA compliance and digital Millennium Copyright Act practice requires copyright owners to understand when the safe harbor protects platforms they use to distribute licensed content and when it provides the mechanism for removing unlicensed uses of their own works.



4. Frequently Asked Questions about Copyright Licensing


Copyright licensing questions arrive from creators who have been approached with a licensing offer and want to understand what rights they are being asked to give up, from content companies trying to understand whether their freelancer agreements transferred the copyright or only a license, from authors who signed contracts decades ago and want to know whether they can reclaim their rights, and from platforms evaluating how the DMCA safe harbor interacts with their licensing obligations.



What Is Copyright Licensing and How Does It Differ from a Copyright Assignment?


Copyright licensing grants permission to exercise one or more of the six exclusive rights under 17 U.S.C. § 106 without transferring ownership of the copyright itself. A copyright assignment transfers ownership of the copyright or a specified exclusive right permanently to the assignee. The licensee can use the work within the license scope but cannot sublicense without express permission. An assignee owns the right and can exploit it, license it to third parties, and enforce it against infringers independently. Both exclusive licenses and assignments require a signed writing under § 204(a), which may be a formal agreement or another signed note or memorandum sufficient to identify the rights transferred.



What Rights Should a Copyright License Identify?


A copyright license should specify which of the six exclusive rights under § 106 are being granted, the territory in which use is permitted, the duration of the license, the media and formats covered, whether the license is exclusive or non-exclusive, whether the licensee may sublicense the rights to third parties, and the conditions under which the license terminates or reverts. Omitting any of these elements creates ambiguity that courts must resolve, often in ways neither party anticipated. A license that grants the right to reproduce without specifying the format, territory, or duration is a license whose scope will be litigated. Specificity in each element prevents the disputes that vague licenses reliably produce.



What Is the Section 203 Termination Right and How Does It Work?


Section 203 gives authors the right to terminate any copyright grant made on or after January 1, 1978, during a five-year window that generally opens 35 years after the grant was executed. If the grant includes the right of publication, the window may open 35 years after publication or 40 years after execution, whichever is earlier. The right applies regardless of what the original contract says and cannot be waived. Notice must be served not less than two and not more than ten years before the intended termination date and recorded with the U.S. Copyright Office before the effective date. Missing the five-year window forfeits the termination right for that grant permanently.



What Is Work Made for Hire and Who Owns the Copyright?


Work made for hire is defined in two categories under § 101. Works prepared by an employee within the scope of employment are owned by the employer from the moment of creation under § 201(b). Commissioned works fall into work made for hire only if they fit one of nine specific statutory categories and the parties have a signed written agreement expressly designating the work as work made for hire. The safest practice is to sign the agreement before creation begins; a post-creation agreement may be treated as an assignment or create timing disputes depending on the facts and governing precedent. Without either an employment relationship or the written designation, the creator retains the copyright.



Does a Copyright License Need to Be in Writing?


Exclusive copyright licenses and assignments require a signed writing under § 204(a) to be enforceable. The writing may be a formal contract or another signed note or memorandum sufficient to identify the rights transferred. An oral exclusive license is not legally effective regardless of what the parties intended or agreed. Non-exclusive licenses do not require a writing and can be implied from circumstances, including delivery of the work with knowledge of the intended use and acceptance of payment. An implied non-exclusive license is limited to the scope the circumstances support. Because implied and oral licenses create ambiguity about scope, territory, and duration, written agreements are advisable for all copyright licenses.


10 Jun, 2026


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