Found this on a graphic artist help website. I think as long as I don't allow the screen printer to change my logo I gave him in anyway, he can't stop me from using it anyway I want in the future. Not that I will have to worry about it but I didn't think the last screen printer would be a such a problem. Its a logo for a little girls softball team after all.
COPYRIGHT FACT #1 – Copyright exists the moment the art is in ‘fixed’ form.
A common misunderstanding is that you have to register something in order for it to be legally copyrighted. The truth is that as soon as a piece of art or other work is in ‘fixed’ form – meaning published on a tangible platform that is viewable by humans – then it’s copyright protected.
This means that the moment you draw a new character in your drawing pad, or save your next logo in Adobe Creative Suit, you officially own the work.
read your Adobe info...they own some of it...
This is an old thread revived with spam (post #17).