9. Social media and IP
Sharing content
Sharing your content on social media platforms before applying to protect your IP could prevent you from securing the rights.
As discussed in the IP registration section, if you share new designs or ideas online, before you have registered your ownership, it could affect your claim.
When you agree to the Terms of Service on social media you may grant permission for any content you post to be used by the service provider regardless of your IP rights. If you post your content and then later apply to protect your IP it may no longer be considered new.
IP Australia explains how to register your rights before promoting your design, trademark, patent etc.
If it isn’t your content, get permission
If you want to use material online that is not your own work and doesn’t have a CC licence, you should get permission.
Link to other content rather than taking a screenshot or copying it, if you don’t have permission. Many platforms also make an embed option available.
If it isn’t your content, get permission (YouTube, 46s):
Our guide to Permissions provides information on when to ask for permission and includes some example permission requests.
Who owns what on social media?
TikTokkers are writing Ratatouille, the musical demonstrates how complicated it can get in our online world to know who owns what. TikTok users have been creating content under the hashtag #ratatouillemusical based on the 2007 film Ratatouille. The creators are located across the world and may face different IP laws depending on where they live.
Under TikTok’s terms of service, users wave their moral rights. So anyone using the TikTok content doesn’t have to attribute the creators. As noted earlier, in Australia, moral rights would normally require anyone using your work to correctly attribute you as the creator.
Find and use media explains ways to avoid infringing copyright when reusing others’ content.