Title 17CopyrightsRelease 119-73

§404 Notice of copyright: Contributions to collective works

Title 17 › Chapter CHAPTER 4— - COPYRIGHT NOTICE, DEPOSIT, AND REGISTRATION › § 404

Last updated Apr 6, 2026|Official source

Summary

A contribution to a collective work can have its own copyright notice under sections 401–403. But one copyright notice for the whole collection is enough to give the separate pieces the same protection under section 401(d) or 402(d), except for ads placed by people other than the collection’s copyright owner. That rule applies no matter who owns the copyrights in the pieces or whether they were published before. If copies or phonorecords were distributed by the copyright owner before the effective date of the Berne Convention Implementation Act of 1988, and a single notice for the collection names someone who is not the copyright owner of a contribution that has no notice, then section 406(a) controls.

Full Legal Text

Title 17, §404

Copyrights — Source: USLM XML via OLRC

(a)A separate contribution to a collective work may bear its own notice of copyright, as provided by sections 401 through 403. However, a single notice applicable to the collective work as a whole is sufficient to invoke the provisions of section 401(d) or 402(d), as applicable with respect to the separate contributions it contains (not including advertisements inserted on behalf of persons other than the owner of copyright in the collective work), regardless of the ownership of copyright in the contributions and whether or not they have been previously published.
(b)With respect to copies and phonorecords publicly distributed by authority of the copyright owner before the effective date of the Berne Convention Implementation Act of 1988, where the person named in a single notice applicable to a collective work as a whole is not the owner of copyright in a separate contribution that does not bear its own notice, the case is governed by the provisions of section 406(a).

Legislative History

Notes & Related Subsidiaries

Historical and Revision Notes

house report no. 94–1476

In conjunction with the provisions of section 201(c), section 404 deals with a troublesome problem under the present law: the notice requirements applicable to contributions published in periodicals and other collective works. The basic approach of the section is threefold: (1) To permit but not require a separate contribution to bear its own notice; (2) To make a single notice, covering the collective work as a whole, sufficient to satisfy the notice requirement for the separate contributions it contains, even if they have been previously published or their ownership is different; and (3) To protect the interests of an innocent infringer of copyright in a contribution that does not bear its own notice, who has dealt in good faith with the person named in the notice covering the collective work as a whole. As a general rule, under this section, the rights in an individual contribution to a collective work would not be affected by the lack of a separate copyright notice, as long as the collective work as a whole bears a notice. One exception to this rule would apply to “advertisements inserted on behalf of persons other than the owner of copyright in the collective work.” Collective works, notably newspapers and magazines, are major advertising media, and it is common for the same advertisement to be published in a number of different periodicals. The general copyright notice in a particular issue would not ordinarily protect the advertisements inserted in it, and relatively little advertising matter today is published with a separate copyright notice. The exception in section 404(a), under which separate notices would be required for most advertisements published in collective works, would impose no undue burdens on copyright owners and is justified by the special circumstances. Under section 404(b) a separate contribution that does not bear its own notice, and that is published in a collective work with a general notice containing the name of someone other than the copyright owner of the contribution, is treated as if it has been published with the wrong name in the notice. The case is governed by section 406(a), which means that an innocent infringer who in good faith took a license from the person named in the general notice would be shielded from liability to some extent.

Editorial Notes

References in Text

The

Effective Date

of the Berne Convention Implementation Act of 1988, referred to in subsec. (b), is Mar. 1, 1989, see section 13 of Pub. L. 100–568, set out as an

Effective Date

of 1988 Amendment note under section 101 of this title.

Amendments

1988—Subsec. (a). Pub. L. 100–568, § 7(d)(1), substituted “to invoke the provisions of section 401(d) or 402(d), as applicable” for “to satisfy the requirements of sections 401 through 403”. Subsec. (b). Pub. L. 100–568, § 7(d)(2), substituted “With respect to copies and phonorecords publicly distributed by authority of the copyright owner before the

Effective Date

of the Berne Convention Implementation Act of 1988, where” for “Where”.

Statutory Notes and Related Subsidiaries

Effective Date

of 1988 AmendmentAmendment by Pub. L. 100–568 effective Mar. 1, 1989, with any cause of action arising under this title before such date being governed by provisions in effect when cause of action arose, see section 13 of Pub. L. 100–568, set out as a note under section 101 of this title.

Reference

Citations & Metadata

Citation

17 U.S.C. § 404

Title 17Copyrights

Last Updated

Apr 6, 2026

Release point: 119-73