Marketplace Pricing Download

Copyright License Agreement (Media)

Drafts a U.S. Copyright License Agreement for media content (film, music, photography, video, software, artwork). Structures reproduction, distribution, display, performance, and derivative works grants with scope, territory, term, and compensation. Use when drafting IP licensing agreements, media content licenses, sync licenses, editorial or commercial use agreements, or royalty-bearing copyright deals.

ID: us.ip.copyright-license-agreement Version: 0.1.0 License: Apache-2.0 Author: CaseMark Language: en Added: 2026-05-27
⬇ Download

Copyright License Agreement (Media)

Drafts a litigation-ready copyright license for media assets covering grant scope, compensation, representations, and termination under U.S. copyright law.

Quick Start

Gather before drafting:

  1. Media description — title, format, copyright registration number (if any)
  2. Party details — full legal names, entity type, formation state, addresses
  3. License scope — exclusive or non-exclusive; rights granted; territory; term
  4. Compensation — flat fee, royalties, advance + royalty, or combination
  5. Field-of-use restrictions — commercial, editorial, educational, broadcast, digital

Core Workflow

1. Recitals & Definitions

Define these terms:

Term Content
Media Title, format, registration no., description
Licensed Rights Specific rights granted (see §2)
Territory Worldwide or enumerated regions
Term Start date, expiration, renewal mechanics
Authorized Uses Permitted channels and formats
Derivative Works Scope and approval process if permitted
Gross/Net Revenue Royalty base definition if applicable

2. Grant of License

Specify in the core grant clause:

  • Exclusive or non-exclusive
  • Sublicensing (default: no, requires written consent)
  • Assignment (default: no without consent; Licensor may assign to successors)

Address each right separately:

Right Granted? Formats/Channels Territory
Reproduction Y/N print, digital, broadcast [Territory]
Distribution Y/N retail, streaming, download [Territory]
Public Display Y/N OOH, online, in-venue [Territory]
Public Performance Y/N broadcast, live, streaming [Territory]
Derivative Works Y/N type + approval required [Territory]

Include a reservation-of-rights carve-out and disclose any third-party encumbrances.

3. Financial Terms

Option A — Flat Fee: Amount, due date.

Option B — Royalty: Rate (% of Net/Gross Revenue), accounting period, payment deadline, minimum guarantee, recoupable advance.

Both structures require:

  • Payment currency and method
  • Late payment interest (e.g., 1.5%/month or max legal rate)
  • Withholding tax allocation
  • Licensee recordkeeping (minimum 3 years)
  • Licensor audit right with notice period, frequency cap, and underpayment threshold (e.g., Licensee pays audit costs if underpayment > 5%)
  • Accounting statement format and frequency

4. Representations & Warranties

Licensor warrants: sole copyright ownership or full authority to grant; no infringement of third-party IP, privacy, or publicity rights; no conflicting liens or licenses; corporate authority to execute.

Licensee warrants: authority to execute and perform; use only as authorized; no ownership challenges.

5. Usage Restrictions & Quality Control

  • Attribution: © [Year] [Licensor Name]. All rights reserved.
  • Modifications: prohibited or permitted only with prior written approval
  • Moral rights: waiver to extent permitted by applicable law (verify jurisdiction scope)
  • Prohibited uses: illegal, defamatory, or objectionable content; competing products if exclusive; political advertising (optional)
  • Quality approval: Licensor review right with business-day turnaround (deemed approved if no response)
  • Technical standards: resolution/format specs for reproductions

6. Term & Termination

State commencement date, expiration, and renewal mechanics (auto-renew or affirmative extension).

Termination triggers:

Trigger Notice Cure Period
Material breach Written 30 days
Insolvency/bankruptcy Automatic N/A
Convenience (Licensee) 60 days written N/A
Convenience (Licensor) 90 days written N/A

Post-termination: cease all new use; destroy/return copies with written certification (30 days); sell-off period for inventory (90 days or none); pre-termination royalties remain payable; prepaid fees non-refundable or pro-rated.

Survival: indemnification, payment, confidentiality, dispute resolution, and representations survive.

7. Indemnification

Mutual indemnification for rep/warranty breaches. Licensor additionally indemnifies for third-party IP infringement from the Media. Licensee additionally indemnifies for unauthorized use.

Procedure: prompt written notice, indemnifying party controls defense with cooperation, no settlement without consent (not unreasonably withheld).

Liability cap: aggregate fees paid in prior 12 months; consider carving out IP indemnity from cap.

8. Governing Law & Disputes

Specify governing state law, venue (county/state, state or federal courts).

Optional dispute ladder: senior executive negotiation (30 days) → mediation via JAMS/AAA (30 days) → binding arbitration or litigation. Address prevailing party attorneys' fees.

9. General Provisions

Entire agreement/integration, written amendments signed by both parties, severability, non-waiver, notice mechanics (certified mail, overnight courier, or email with read receipt), force majeure (include or exclude), electronic signature validity under ESIGN Act and UETA.

10. Signature Blocks & Exhibits

Include signature blocks for both parties (name, title, date).

Attach as needed:

  • Exhibit A — Media description (title, format, registration no., sample)
  • Exhibit B — Approved uses / usage examples
  • Exhibit C — Payment schedule or royalty formula
  • Exhibit D — Territory definitions

Pitfalls & Checks

  • Registration matters: Include Copyright Office registration number if available; unregistered works limit statutory damages and fee recovery under 17 U.S.C. § 412
  • Work-for-hire trap: Confirm Media is not a work-for-hire owned by a third-party employer
  • Exclusivity recording: Exclusive licenses should be in writing and may require recordation with Copyright Office for priority protection under 17 U.S.C. § 205
  • VARA rights: Visual artists may have inalienable moral rights under 17 U.S.C. § 106A; address waiver expressly
  • Music licensing: Sync and master licenses are separate rights; confirm which are needed for audiovisual use
  • AI-generated media: Copyright ownership of AI-generated works remains legally unsettled; flag if applicable
  • International scope: Non-U.S. territories may require separate licenses or local law compliance (e.g., EU Database Directive, moral rights regimes in France/Germany)

Troubleshooting

  • Unclear rights scope: If the client cannot articulate which rights are needed, walk through the rights matrix row by row against their intended use cases
  • Missing registration: Advise client to register before licensing if statutory damages and fee-shifting are important enforcement tools
  • Royalty vs. flat fee ambiguity: Default to flat fee for one-time uses; royalty for ongoing exploitation with revenue streams
  • Conflicting licenses: Request Licensor's disclosure of all existing license grants to confirm no overlap with the proposed grant

Related Skills

United States flagUnited States · ip

Answer with Invalidity Contentions

Drafts a defendant's Answer with Invalidity Contentions responding to a U.S. patent infringement complaint. Covers FRCP 8(b) admissions/denials, affi…

CaseMark
United States flagUnited States · ip

Art Law Summaries

Generates structured U.S. art law summaries with Bluebook citations, doctrinal analysis, and stakeholder guidance. Use when researching art law prece…

CaseMark
United States flagUnited States · ip

Biotechnology Patent Summaries

Summarizes biotech patent families and disputes into litigation-ready intelligence briefs. Trigger when the user provides patent applications, issued…

CaseMark
United States flagUnited States · ip

Check a Trademark

Quickly check if a name is free to use as a trademark. I search the official US trademark database for exact, sound-alike, and look-alike hits, then …

gethouston
United States flagUnited States · ip

Joint Claim Construction Chart

Drafts Joint Claim Construction Charts for patent litigation Markman hearings in US federal courts. Organizes disputed claim terms with competing par…

CaseMark