


Based on statutory protection under the Copyright Act, 1957 and aligned with the Berne Convention — India’s copyright framework provides automatic, internationally recognised protection for original works from the moment of their creation.
Copyright in India arises automatically on creation of an original work — no registration or filing is required for subsistence of rights . This is a fundamental distinction from trademarks and patents, and it means that creators and businesses often hold valuable copyright portfolios without fully realising it. The risk flows from the same source: if ownership is not clearly documented, licensed, or enforced, rights that exist in law may be commercially unenforceable in practice. ATB Legal’s copyright practice supports clients across the complete lifecycle — from ownership structuring and agreement drafting through to registration, licensing, and active enforcement.
Copyright protection in India is governed by the Copyright Act 1957 and as amended, Copyright Rules 1958 administered by the Copyright Office under the Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade (DPIIT). India is a signatory to the Berne Convention, the Universal Copyright Convention, and the TRIPS Agreement — meaning that Indian copyright is automatically recognised in most countries and foreign works from member countries receive equivalent protection in India without registration.
Works protected include literary works (books, articles, and software code), dramatic works, musical works, artistic works, cinematograph films, and sound recordings. The standard term for most original works is the author’s lifetime plus 60 years. Software and computer programs are explicitly protected as literary works under the Act — a provision of particular importance for India’s technology sector.
Registration with the Copyright Office, while not required for rights to subsist, creates a public record of authorship and constitutes prima facie evidence in infringement proceedings. For commercially significant works — software products, media libraries, design portfolios, and published content — registration is strongly advisable.
India’s digital economy generates copyright in volume — app interfaces, website content, database structures, marketing collateral, video content, and AI-generated outputs all raise copyright questions that require active management. ATB Legal advises technology companies, media producers, content agencies, and digital platforms on copyright ownership frameworks, work-for-hire and contractor agreements, platform content policies, and the enforcement mechanisms available under the Information Technology Act 2000 alongside the Copyright Act 1957.

At ATB Legal, we understand that copyright is simultaneously one of the most pervasive and one of the most under-managed areas of intellectual property. Businesses generate copyright constantly — in every piece of software written, every design produced, every document created — yet ownership is frequently undocumented and enforcement is reactive rather than strategic. Our copyright practice takes a lifecycle approach: establishing clear ownership from creation, building the registration and documentation record through the Copyright Office, structuring licensing arrangements that generate commercial returns, and pursuing infringers decisively under the Copyright Act 1957 and the Information Technology Act 2000. The goal is a copyright portfolio that is commercially valuable, legally defensible, and actively managed.

This website provides general information only, may not reflect current law, and should not be acted upon without professional advice.