I've recently been exploring the idea of minting and potentially auctioning NFTs (non-fungible tokens) of reddit submissions written by myself. These are original written works. My layman understanding is that I DO have inherent copyright claims as the author over these publicly posted articles, but I have a few questions.
For reference, here is the relevant portion of the reddit.com Terms of Service:
But my main questions are:
1. How would I go about "proving" that I am the author of my own submissions to a forum like reddit? I obviously have access to the accounts I created that posted the works, but on the surface, my real life name of course isn't on them.
If it ever came to a legal matter, how would I typically prove that I am [SillyRedditUsername1234]? Would it be wise for me to register each post I am interested in protected as a creative work with the U.S. Copyright Office (or other organizations in other countries, too), or is that not necessary?
2. A number of people have already reposted or used some of these creative works (that were originally posted to reddit) elsewhere on the internet, such as in youtube videos, personal websites, blogs, and even news articles. Note: Many of these don't seem to be cases of "fair use," and usually much more than 10% of the written work is reposted/reused. It's sometimes a case of the entire post written by me being simply copy-pasted in full.
If I wanted any of these removed, would it be unwise for me to just contact the people myself and make the request? Or should I actually lawyer-up first and have them send something more formal? The former is preferable, but I don't want to mess up making the first request myself.
Also: Years ago I DID grant someone permission to use one of my posts on their website. It was a very casual and friendly thing... they simply asked if they could re-post a copy of it there, and I said "Sure!" There weren't any time stipulations or discussion, really.
However... what if I have changed my mind since then? (I'm simply more interested in protecting the content now than I was then, and also their site has since become something I don't want to be associated with) Do I still have the legal right to ask them to now remove my work from their site? Or did I accidentally grant them permission in perpetuity or something?
3. NFT Question: As stated, I'm curious about these things with an eye towards minting some of my written posts as NFTs.
Am I correct in assuming that I actually have a right to? I know I could obviously mint an NFT representation of something I have written, but does it matter if a thing has already been posted publicly on an internet forum (reddit specifically)?
Could I potentially take legal action against other individuals (besides reddit itself) who might ever try to create or sell an NFT reproduction of things I have written and posted to reddit?
Should I register each work anywhere else before I go about creating NFTs, or do I already have all legal copyright claims simply by virtue of being the original author?
Any help is greatly appreciated, especially in regards to things I'm probably not thinking of!
For reference, here is the relevant portion of the reddit.com Terms of Service:
So, I am assuming that reddit the company is the only entity in the world (other than me) that could legally sell a reproduction of any of my written works that were submitted to their site, and if any one else tried (including using NFTs), I could probably take legal action against them (please correct me if I am wrong).By submitting Your Content to the Services, you represent and warrant that you have all rights, power, and authority necessary to grant the rights to Your Content contained within these Terms. Because you alone are responsible for Your Content, you may expose yourself to liability if you post or share Content without all necessary rights.
You retain any ownership rights you have in Your Content, but you grant Reddit the following license to use that Content:
When Your Content is created with or submitted to the Services, you grant us a worldwide, royalty-free, perpetual, irrevocable, non-exclusive, transferable, and sublicensable license to use, copy, modify, adapt, prepare derivative works of, distribute, store, perform, and display Your Content and any name, username, voice, or likeness provided in connection with Your Content in all media formats and channels now known or later developed anywhere in the world. This license includes the right for us to make Your Content available for syndication, broadcast, distribution, or publication by other companies, organizations, or individuals who partner with Reddit. You also agree that we may remove metadata associated with Your Content, and you irrevocably waive any claims and assertions of moral rights or attribution with respect to Your Content."
But my main questions are:
1. How would I go about "proving" that I am the author of my own submissions to a forum like reddit? I obviously have access to the accounts I created that posted the works, but on the surface, my real life name of course isn't on them.
If it ever came to a legal matter, how would I typically prove that I am [SillyRedditUsername1234]? Would it be wise for me to register each post I am interested in protected as a creative work with the U.S. Copyright Office (or other organizations in other countries, too), or is that not necessary?
2. A number of people have already reposted or used some of these creative works (that were originally posted to reddit) elsewhere on the internet, such as in youtube videos, personal websites, blogs, and even news articles. Note: Many of these don't seem to be cases of "fair use," and usually much more than 10% of the written work is reposted/reused. It's sometimes a case of the entire post written by me being simply copy-pasted in full.
If I wanted any of these removed, would it be unwise for me to just contact the people myself and make the request? Or should I actually lawyer-up first and have them send something more formal? The former is preferable, but I don't want to mess up making the first request myself.
Also: Years ago I DID grant someone permission to use one of my posts on their website. It was a very casual and friendly thing... they simply asked if they could re-post a copy of it there, and I said "Sure!" There weren't any time stipulations or discussion, really.
However... what if I have changed my mind since then? (I'm simply more interested in protecting the content now than I was then, and also their site has since become something I don't want to be associated with) Do I still have the legal right to ask them to now remove my work from their site? Or did I accidentally grant them permission in perpetuity or something?
3. NFT Question: As stated, I'm curious about these things with an eye towards minting some of my written posts as NFTs.
Am I correct in assuming that I actually have a right to? I know I could obviously mint an NFT representation of something I have written, but does it matter if a thing has already been posted publicly on an internet forum (reddit specifically)?
Could I potentially take legal action against other individuals (besides reddit itself) who might ever try to create or sell an NFT reproduction of things I have written and posted to reddit?
Should I register each work anywhere else before I go about creating NFTs, or do I already have all legal copyright claims simply by virtue of being the original author?
Any help is greatly appreciated, especially in regards to things I'm probably not thinking of!