Intellectual Property · Service

Copyright and Digital Works

We advise authors, publishers, creative businesses and corporate clients on the protection, registration and commercial exploitation of copyright and related rights, with particular focus on works created and exploited in digital environments.

Registro de la Propiedad Intelectual
Evidence of authorship
EU InfoSoc Directive
European framework
Berne Convention
International protection
Software & digital
Licensing & compliance
What we handle

Scope of work

Registration of works

Registration of works before national copyright registries, including the Spanish Registro de la Propiedad Intelectual, as an evidentiary record of authorship and date of creation.

Assignment & licensing

Copyright assignment, licensing and publishing agreements: literary works, audiovisual productions, music, photography, illustration, software and digital content.

Software protection

End-user licence agreements (EULAs), software-as-a-service (SaaS) agreements, software development and licensing agreements, open source compliance and dual licensing strategies.

Enforcement

Copyright enforcement: cease and desist actions, notice and takedown procedures, customs measures and infringement proceedings before national courts.

Moral rights & title

Moral rights, commissioned works, employee-created works and chain-of-title arrangements.

Collective management

Coordination with collective rights management organisations where required.

Copyright is most valuable when it is documented, licensed and enforced. We handle the three stages.

Typical situations

When to engage us

Creative business

A publisher, production company or creative business needing robust contracts for the acquisition, exploitation or licensing of creative works.

Software & digital

A software developer or digital business requiring licensing infrastructure and open source compliance review.

Rights enforcement

A rights holder facing infringement and seeking enforcement across multiple jurisdictions.

Where we act

Jurisdictions

Spanish national registration and enforcement, European-level matters under the InfoSoc Directive and related Union instruments, and coordinated work with correspondent counsel in Latin America, Africa and other jurisdictions under the Berne Convention framework.

Spain & Europe
National registration and enforcement, and European-level matters under the InfoSoc Directive and related Union instruments.
International
Protection under the Berne Convention framework across its member countries.
Latin America & Africa
Coordinated work with correspondent counsel across the region and other jurisdictions.
FAQ

Frequently asked questions

Do I need to register copyright, or does it exist automatically?
Under the Berne Convention copyright arises automatically when an original work is created — no registration or formality is required for protection to exist. Registration is not constitutive, but it provides strong evidence of authorship and of the date of creation, which is valuable if ownership is ever disputed. We advise on when registration and other dated records are worth putting in place.
What does the Spanish Registro de la Propiedad Intelectual give me?
Registration before the Spanish Registro de la Propiedad Intelectual is voluntary and creates an official, dated record of authorship and of the existence of the work. It does not create the right — that already exists from creation — but it shifts the practical burden of proof in your favour in a dispute. We handle the registration and keep the evidentiary record consistent across your catalogue.
How long does copyright last?
In the European Union the economic rights generally last for the life of the author plus seventy years after their death, after which the work enters the public domain. Different rules apply to certain works, such as those of joint authorship or works owned by legal entities. We advise on the term that applies to each work in your portfolio.
Is software protected by copyright or by patents?
In Europe software is protected primarily by copyright, which covers the source and object code as a literary work. Patents are available only in limited cases for inventions with a genuine technical character, not for software as such. In practice, protecting software well is a contractual exercise — licensing, SaaS terms and open source compliance — which is where most of the value and the risk sit.
Who owns a work created by an employee or a freelancer?
It depends on the relationship and the contract. For employees, economic rights in certain works (notably software) may pass to the employer by default, but this should never be assumed for commissioned work from a freelancer, where rights stay with the author unless they are assigned in writing. We put proper assignment and chain-of-title arrangements in place so you actually own what you paid for.
What are moral rights, and can I assign them?
Moral rights protect the personal link between an author and their work — principally the right to be recognised as the author and to object to distortions of the work. In Spain and much of continental Europe they belong to the author, and the core of them cannot be assigned or waived, even when the economic rights are transferred. We draft agreements that respect moral rights while securing the exploitation rights you need.
How do I stop someone using my work without permission?
Enforcement usually escalates from a cease and desist letter and notice-and-takedown requests to online platforms, through customs measures against infringing physical goods, up to infringement proceedings before the courts. The right step depends on who the infringer is and where they are. We coordinate the strategy and act, or instruct local litigators, across the jurisdictions involved.
Does my copyright protect me in Latin America and Africa?
Largely, yes. Most countries in both regions are members of the Berne Convention, so your work is protected automatically without local registration, on broadly equivalent terms to local authors. Enforcement, however, is local: we coordinate correspondent counsel to register where useful and to act against infringement across the Europe–Latin America–Africa corridor.