10 things to do before January

Website attorneyAs the year wraps up, here are a few things you’ll want to check on with your Website attorney and CPA before the holidays hit. Be nice to yourself by doing these so you don’t end up on someone’s naughty Internet business list.

1. Did you update your website legal documents to accurately reflect your privacy policies, current business address and contact information, and designate your DMCA agent?

2. Did you observe business entity formalities to protect yourself from personal liability? If a corporation, did you keep corporate minutes and resolutions? Did you hold board of directors and shareholder meetings? Did you issue shares? If a limited liability company, did you update your membership agreement and keep written records of major business decisions?

3. If you set up your business entity in one state but are running all of your operations in another state, did you qualify to do business in the state where you’re actually running everything?

4. Did you get your tax status set up correctly or updated to reflect changing circumstances? Sales tax ID? W-9s and W-8BENs from your affiliates? TIN/EIN?

5. Did you register your copyrights and trademarks to protect them?

6. If you’re doing business using an assumed name (a.k.a. DBA or fictitious name), did you register the name?

7. Did you protect your privacy by removing all online references to your home address and personal phone numbers? Did you go through your social media (Facebook etc.) and delete pictures and text that portrays you in a negative light?

8. Did you put written agreements in place for any freelancing your doing or projects you’re outsourcing? Did you put a social media policy in place for your business to protect yourself from rogue employees or independent contractors?

9. Have you made your end-of-the-year business purchases that you can write off as office expenses? Talked with your accountant about ways to slash your taxes for this year and next?

10. Did you check the Web using Copyscape.com or a similar service to see if someone’s been stealing your content and re-using on their sites without your permission? Have you check for pirate copies of your stuff on eBay, torrent sites, and usenet groups?

Be sure to discuss any questions you have with your Website attorney and accountant.

To your online success!

-Mike the Website attorney

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Do you make this website copyright mistake?

web lawyer copyright registrationAs a Web lawyer, the #1 mistake I see Internet business owners make when protecting their website’s content from pirates is to put a copyright notice on the site and do nothing more.

Although a notice with the word “Copyright,” © symbol etc. is a good first step, it’s a baby step when it comes to protecting what you own.

If you’ve got a U.S.-based website with text, photos, graphics, and/or eBooks, there’s one more important step you must take for peace of mind.

To learn what you need to do, I’ve created a new special report called  “How to Quickly and Easily Protect Your Internet Business With U.S. Copyrights.”

Of course, if you have any particular legal questions about copyrights, consult with your Web lawyer.

To your online success,

-Mike the Web lawyer

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Facebook stunt lands guy in jail

facebook website attorneyToo often, as a Website attorney, I see domestic disputes turn into online stalking and harassment. Then there’s this case involving a guy who went nuts when his girlfriend broke up with him.

In this case, the guy threatened his ex, stole her stuff, and then decided to get “revenge” using Facebook as the weapon. He posted a naked pic of her on Facebook and made it public so that a half billion FB users had access to it, including her friends.

Arrested and convicted for distributing the photo, the guy will be spending only 4 months in jail for the stunt.

Your Website attorney will tell you that there are at least two important lessons to learn from this…

1. Don’t take (or let anyone else take) pics or video of you that could embarrass you in the future. It can and will come back to haunt you somehow…often permanently cached somewhere on the Internet.

2. If you have anyone doing work on your Internet business (employee or independent contractor), you’ll want to have a Social Media Policy in place that protects your reputation and limits your liability exposure for what they put on Facebook and other social media sites while doing work for you.

To your online success!

-Mike the Website attorney

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