| Protecting Your Ideas |
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Page 2 of 2 What you can doHere are some things you can do to help protect your idea when you’re discussing it with, or submitting it to, other people. But use some judgment about when, how and whether you do them – you have to balance concern about protecting your idea against not offending the people you might want to work with by suggesting that you don’t trust them and are prepared to sue them if they steal your idea.
Why sign a submission release?You may be worried about protecting an idea you’re disclosing to someone else, but the people receiving the proposal may be just as concerned. They’re taking a risk that if they ever work on a project that’s even slightly similar to your idea, you’ll sue them for stealing your idea, even if they came up with their similar idea independently or someone else brought it to them. (It’s not unheard of for people to overestimate just how original their ideas are.)These types of claims have become common – especially for successful productions – so many people, especially studios and broadcasters, won’t accept unsolicited material or will refuse to accept submissions unless you sign a release. “Submission releases” generally have you acknowledge that your material may be similar to material that other people have submitted or will submit, and agree that the reviewing party can use any part of your material without compensation to you if they decide they have an independent legal right to do so (for example, because it’s not novel or was independently created by them or someone else). Some releases also restrict you to arbitration if there’s a dispute (excluding lawsuits in court) and limit the amount of money you can get if you win the dispute. It may seem unfair, but signing a submission release may be the only way to get your project in front of someone. ![]() |








