What copyright registration is for
Registration at copyright.gov creates an official public record and is required before you can sue for infringement in the U.S. — and timely registration unlocks statutory damages. It's the legal heavyweight, and nothing replaces it for litigation.
The trade-offs: a fee per work, processing time, and the impracticality of registering every draft, demo, or iteration.
Where a timestamp is the better fit
You don't need formal registration to own your copyright — you own it automatically when you create the work. What you often lack is dated proof. A blockchain timestamp fills that gap:
- Instant and low-cost — timestamp the moment you create something.
- Tamper-proof and independently verifiable — recorded on a public ledger, checkable by anyone.
- Private — only the file's hash is published, never the file.
What each one proves
| Copyright registration | Blockchain timestamp | |
|---|---|---|
| Legal basis to sue | Yes | No (it's evidence) |
| Statutory damages | Yes (if timely) | No |
| Speed | Days to months | Minutes |
| Cost | Fee per work | One-time, low |
| Proves a date | Indirectly | Directly, tamper-proof |
The practical answer
It isn't either/or. Timestamp early and often while you create and share, and register the finished works you might defend in court. See blockchain timestamping vs. the Copyright Office and our copyright guides by work type.