Putting your work online is how you get seen — and how it gets copied, reposted, and sometimes claimed by someone else. You can't make work uncopyable, but you can make ownership clear and provable. Here's a practical playbook.
Start with what you already have
The moment you create original work, you own its copyright — automatically, no registration required. So the goal online isn't to get rights; it's to deter copying and keep proof you're the creator.
Practical deterrents (and their limits)
- Watermarks discourage casual theft and keep your name attached, but they can be cropped or removed and are not, by themselves, legal protection.
- Metadata and a visible © notice signal ownership, though platforms often strip metadata on upload.
- Lower-resolution previews limit how usable a stolen copy is.
- Clear terms on your site set expectations for reuse and licensing.
These raise the cost of copying but don't prove anything on their own.
Keep provable, dated evidence
The piece that actually holds up is dated proof of authorship. Before you publish, timestamp your original file — the full-resolution master, the layered source, the manuscript. A blockchain timestamp records that your exact file existed on a date, tamper-proof and independently verifiable. If your work is reposted or claimed, you can show your original predated the copy.
For specific media, see our guides on copyrighting a photo, artwork, or a song.
Register what matters most
For flagship works you'd defend in court, register with the U.S. Copyright Office — that's what enables an infringement lawsuit and statutory damages. Use registration and timestamping together: timestamp everything you post, register the work that earns.
You can timestamp a file in minutes before your next upload.
