Does a journal retracting a paper also renounce copyright?











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Every now and then, a journal retracts a paper for some reason or another. I'm wondering what impact retraction has on copyright, assuming the journal (or its publisher) was given its copyright.



Question: Does a journal retracting a paper also renounce copyright?



The notion of "retracting" a paper implies "we don't want it" to some extent (particularly if it is a journal-initiated retraction), which I feel may be interpreted as renouncing copyright altogether.










share|improve this question






















  • In general (i.e. when considering non-US jurisdictions), copyright may not even be possible to renounce. Take Germany for example.
    – Kevin
    Nov 12 at 20:58






  • 2




    When, e.g., a book publisher wants to let a book go out of print, and they own the copyright, typically they don't renounce the copyright (which may not even be possible). They would be more likely to let it revert to the author, and this would typically be stated explicitly in the contract. That way the author can try to find a new publisher, or self-publish or put it on the internet if they wish. I don't know if this situation is at all analogous.
    – Ben Crowell
    Nov 12 at 23:49










  • @BenCrowell I don't think it is, because publishers still distribute retracted papers - often behind the usual paywalls.
    – Anyon
    Nov 13 at 3:20










  • @Kevin It’s more subtle than that because the concept of copyright does not map directly to German law: Urheberrecht (= authorship) cannot be renounced or transferred, but the journal doesn’t have that in any case; it merely has exclusive or non-exclusive publication rights. And the journal is entirely within its right to renounce its publication rights.
    – Konrad Rudolph
    2 days ago








  • 1




    Technically there is also the strange case of plagiarism. Say Bob copies Alice's work and submits it und his own name. If he is found out after acceptance, the journal will have to retract it, but has no copyright to renounce in the first place, since Alice never transferred any to them...
    – mlk
    2 days ago















up vote
37
down vote

favorite












Every now and then, a journal retracts a paper for some reason or another. I'm wondering what impact retraction has on copyright, assuming the journal (or its publisher) was given its copyright.



Question: Does a journal retracting a paper also renounce copyright?



The notion of "retracting" a paper implies "we don't want it" to some extent (particularly if it is a journal-initiated retraction), which I feel may be interpreted as renouncing copyright altogether.










share|improve this question






















  • In general (i.e. when considering non-US jurisdictions), copyright may not even be possible to renounce. Take Germany for example.
    – Kevin
    Nov 12 at 20:58






  • 2




    When, e.g., a book publisher wants to let a book go out of print, and they own the copyright, typically they don't renounce the copyright (which may not even be possible). They would be more likely to let it revert to the author, and this would typically be stated explicitly in the contract. That way the author can try to find a new publisher, or self-publish or put it on the internet if they wish. I don't know if this situation is at all analogous.
    – Ben Crowell
    Nov 12 at 23:49










  • @BenCrowell I don't think it is, because publishers still distribute retracted papers - often behind the usual paywalls.
    – Anyon
    Nov 13 at 3:20










  • @Kevin It’s more subtle than that because the concept of copyright does not map directly to German law: Urheberrecht (= authorship) cannot be renounced or transferred, but the journal doesn’t have that in any case; it merely has exclusive or non-exclusive publication rights. And the journal is entirely within its right to renounce its publication rights.
    – Konrad Rudolph
    2 days ago








  • 1




    Technically there is also the strange case of plagiarism. Say Bob copies Alice's work and submits it und his own name. If he is found out after acceptance, the journal will have to retract it, but has no copyright to renounce in the first place, since Alice never transferred any to them...
    – mlk
    2 days ago













up vote
37
down vote

favorite









up vote
37
down vote

favorite











Every now and then, a journal retracts a paper for some reason or another. I'm wondering what impact retraction has on copyright, assuming the journal (or its publisher) was given its copyright.



Question: Does a journal retracting a paper also renounce copyright?



The notion of "retracting" a paper implies "we don't want it" to some extent (particularly if it is a journal-initiated retraction), which I feel may be interpreted as renouncing copyright altogether.










share|improve this question













Every now and then, a journal retracts a paper for some reason or another. I'm wondering what impact retraction has on copyright, assuming the journal (or its publisher) was given its copyright.



Question: Does a journal retracting a paper also renounce copyright?



The notion of "retracting" a paper implies "we don't want it" to some extent (particularly if it is a journal-initiated retraction), which I feel may be interpreted as renouncing copyright altogether.







copyright retraction






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share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Nov 12 at 11:22









Rebecca J. Stones

5,76342940




5,76342940












  • In general (i.e. when considering non-US jurisdictions), copyright may not even be possible to renounce. Take Germany for example.
    – Kevin
    Nov 12 at 20:58






  • 2




    When, e.g., a book publisher wants to let a book go out of print, and they own the copyright, typically they don't renounce the copyright (which may not even be possible). They would be more likely to let it revert to the author, and this would typically be stated explicitly in the contract. That way the author can try to find a new publisher, or self-publish or put it on the internet if they wish. I don't know if this situation is at all analogous.
    – Ben Crowell
    Nov 12 at 23:49










  • @BenCrowell I don't think it is, because publishers still distribute retracted papers - often behind the usual paywalls.
    – Anyon
    Nov 13 at 3:20










  • @Kevin It’s more subtle than that because the concept of copyright does not map directly to German law: Urheberrecht (= authorship) cannot be renounced or transferred, but the journal doesn’t have that in any case; it merely has exclusive or non-exclusive publication rights. And the journal is entirely within its right to renounce its publication rights.
    – Konrad Rudolph
    2 days ago








  • 1




    Technically there is also the strange case of plagiarism. Say Bob copies Alice's work and submits it und his own name. If he is found out after acceptance, the journal will have to retract it, but has no copyright to renounce in the first place, since Alice never transferred any to them...
    – mlk
    2 days ago


















  • In general (i.e. when considering non-US jurisdictions), copyright may not even be possible to renounce. Take Germany for example.
    – Kevin
    Nov 12 at 20:58






  • 2




    When, e.g., a book publisher wants to let a book go out of print, and they own the copyright, typically they don't renounce the copyright (which may not even be possible). They would be more likely to let it revert to the author, and this would typically be stated explicitly in the contract. That way the author can try to find a new publisher, or self-publish or put it on the internet if they wish. I don't know if this situation is at all analogous.
    – Ben Crowell
    Nov 12 at 23:49










  • @BenCrowell I don't think it is, because publishers still distribute retracted papers - often behind the usual paywalls.
    – Anyon
    Nov 13 at 3:20










  • @Kevin It’s more subtle than that because the concept of copyright does not map directly to German law: Urheberrecht (= authorship) cannot be renounced or transferred, but the journal doesn’t have that in any case; it merely has exclusive or non-exclusive publication rights. And the journal is entirely within its right to renounce its publication rights.
    – Konrad Rudolph
    2 days ago








  • 1




    Technically there is also the strange case of plagiarism. Say Bob copies Alice's work and submits it und his own name. If he is found out after acceptance, the journal will have to retract it, but has no copyright to renounce in the first place, since Alice never transferred any to them...
    – mlk
    2 days ago
















In general (i.e. when considering non-US jurisdictions), copyright may not even be possible to renounce. Take Germany for example.
– Kevin
Nov 12 at 20:58




In general (i.e. when considering non-US jurisdictions), copyright may not even be possible to renounce. Take Germany for example.
– Kevin
Nov 12 at 20:58




2




2




When, e.g., a book publisher wants to let a book go out of print, and they own the copyright, typically they don't renounce the copyright (which may not even be possible). They would be more likely to let it revert to the author, and this would typically be stated explicitly in the contract. That way the author can try to find a new publisher, or self-publish or put it on the internet if they wish. I don't know if this situation is at all analogous.
– Ben Crowell
Nov 12 at 23:49




When, e.g., a book publisher wants to let a book go out of print, and they own the copyright, typically they don't renounce the copyright (which may not even be possible). They would be more likely to let it revert to the author, and this would typically be stated explicitly in the contract. That way the author can try to find a new publisher, or self-publish or put it on the internet if they wish. I don't know if this situation is at all analogous.
– Ben Crowell
Nov 12 at 23:49












@BenCrowell I don't think it is, because publishers still distribute retracted papers - often behind the usual paywalls.
– Anyon
Nov 13 at 3:20




@BenCrowell I don't think it is, because publishers still distribute retracted papers - often behind the usual paywalls.
– Anyon
Nov 13 at 3:20












@Kevin It’s more subtle than that because the concept of copyright does not map directly to German law: Urheberrecht (= authorship) cannot be renounced or transferred, but the journal doesn’t have that in any case; it merely has exclusive or non-exclusive publication rights. And the journal is entirely within its right to renounce its publication rights.
– Konrad Rudolph
2 days ago






@Kevin It’s more subtle than that because the concept of copyright does not map directly to German law: Urheberrecht (= authorship) cannot be renounced or transferred, but the journal doesn’t have that in any case; it merely has exclusive or non-exclusive publication rights. And the journal is entirely within its right to renounce its publication rights.
– Konrad Rudolph
2 days ago






1




1




Technically there is also the strange case of plagiarism. Say Bob copies Alice's work and submits it und his own name. If he is found out after acceptance, the journal will have to retract it, but has no copyright to renounce in the first place, since Alice never transferred any to them...
– mlk
2 days ago




Technically there is also the strange case of plagiarism. Say Bob copies Alice's work and submits it und his own name. If he is found out after acceptance, the journal will have to retract it, but has no copyright to renounce in the first place, since Alice never transferred any to them...
– mlk
2 days ago










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
22
down vote













Good question. As far as I can tell, the answer is "no" and the journal retracting the paper still retains copyright (if it was given the copyright in the first place).



Here're some retraction policies: one, two, three. Although the question you ask is not discussed, two things can be noted:




  • Even if a paper is retracted, the publisher still distributes it (as in, it's still available from the journal's website). What changes is that the publisher makes it clear that the article is retracted.

  • The publisher only stops distributing the paper if they are legally obliged to do so (e.g. if the copyright is actually held by someone other than the authors, and the authors had no legal standing to sign the copyright to the publisher).


Since the publisher needs the copyright (or permission from the copyright holder) to distribute the paper, the logical answer is "no".






share|improve this answer



















  • 1




    Quick clarification on the last sentence. The publisher needs the copyright or authorization from the party who has it. (This is why some publishers can get away with not taking copyright in the first place. As part of the submission process you sign agreements to give them the rights to distribute.)
    – R.M.
    Nov 12 at 14:05






  • 14




    The publisher absolutely does not need the copyright to distribute the paper. They merely need the permission of the copyright holder, which is much easier if that means "they merely need their own permission."
    – David Richerby
    Nov 12 at 14:05








  • 1




    @DavidRicherby Absolutely correct, though its noteworthy that type of permission is almost always referred to as a license.
    – TimothyAWiseman
    Nov 12 at 18:27


















up vote
8
down vote













Not automatically. Assuming this is a journal where authors assign them copyright, then the author has signed over the copyright and the article "belongs" to the publisher now. Whether they choose to publish it, retract it, or make and market paper aeroplanes from it is none of the author's concern.



However, copyright transfer agreements sometimes (usually?) have a clause stating that if the journal doesn't publish it, copyright will revert to the author. I'm not sure whether that would apply in the event of a retraction, but the only way to tell would be to check the wording of that agreement.



Disclaimer: IANAL, and this is not legal advice.






share|improve this answer




























    up vote
    4
    down vote













    In general, no, but there is a lot of nuance to the question.



    First, you did not specify your jurisdiction. While many international treaties provide a degree of uniformity to copyright questions, there are significant differences between jurisdictions. For example, the U.S. is notorious for having very limited and weak "Moral Rights" while they are quite strong and significant in Canada. I am not actually aware of any differences in any jurisdiction that will make the answer to this question differ, but I cannot guarantee they do not exist. The best advice is that if you face this question in a way that will have real consequences, you should consult a qualified attorney in the jurisdiction in question



    With that said, nothing about retraction inherently relinquishes copyrights. In fact, under most circumstances, the copyright holder may elect to not publish something while still forbidding any others from publishing. In other words, a copyright holder may choose to use copyright to prevent any publication.



    However, this ultimately comes down to the contracts and specific statements involved. While I haven't ever seen this happen, a publisher could elect to disavow copyright (or release to the public domain) at the same time as they retract.



    Its also possible that the publication never held the copyright at all, but only held a license to distribute. This is in fact what I granted with my last publication rather than a transfer of the copyright.



    Even if the copyright is transferred to the publishers, there may be a clause that transfers it back if it is not published within the specified time or is withdrawn within that time (2 years is common).



    TLDR: Retraction does not by itself change the copyright and it is likely the publisher either continues to retain the copyright or an exclusive license to the article. But that is a rule of thumb rather than an absolute and you will have to evaluate the circumstances around any particular article individually.






    share|improve this answer



















    • 1




      +1; I've taken the liberty to correct what looked like typos.
      – darij grinberg
      Nov 12 at 22:53










    • @darijgrinberg Thank you.
      – TimothyAWiseman
      Nov 12 at 22:55











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    3 Answers
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    3 Answers
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    up vote
    22
    down vote













    Good question. As far as I can tell, the answer is "no" and the journal retracting the paper still retains copyright (if it was given the copyright in the first place).



    Here're some retraction policies: one, two, three. Although the question you ask is not discussed, two things can be noted:




    • Even if a paper is retracted, the publisher still distributes it (as in, it's still available from the journal's website). What changes is that the publisher makes it clear that the article is retracted.

    • The publisher only stops distributing the paper if they are legally obliged to do so (e.g. if the copyright is actually held by someone other than the authors, and the authors had no legal standing to sign the copyright to the publisher).


    Since the publisher needs the copyright (or permission from the copyright holder) to distribute the paper, the logical answer is "no".






    share|improve this answer



















    • 1




      Quick clarification on the last sentence. The publisher needs the copyright or authorization from the party who has it. (This is why some publishers can get away with not taking copyright in the first place. As part of the submission process you sign agreements to give them the rights to distribute.)
      – R.M.
      Nov 12 at 14:05






    • 14




      The publisher absolutely does not need the copyright to distribute the paper. They merely need the permission of the copyright holder, which is much easier if that means "they merely need their own permission."
      – David Richerby
      Nov 12 at 14:05








    • 1




      @DavidRicherby Absolutely correct, though its noteworthy that type of permission is almost always referred to as a license.
      – TimothyAWiseman
      Nov 12 at 18:27















    up vote
    22
    down vote













    Good question. As far as I can tell, the answer is "no" and the journal retracting the paper still retains copyright (if it was given the copyright in the first place).



    Here're some retraction policies: one, two, three. Although the question you ask is not discussed, two things can be noted:




    • Even if a paper is retracted, the publisher still distributes it (as in, it's still available from the journal's website). What changes is that the publisher makes it clear that the article is retracted.

    • The publisher only stops distributing the paper if they are legally obliged to do so (e.g. if the copyright is actually held by someone other than the authors, and the authors had no legal standing to sign the copyright to the publisher).


    Since the publisher needs the copyright (or permission from the copyright holder) to distribute the paper, the logical answer is "no".






    share|improve this answer



















    • 1




      Quick clarification on the last sentence. The publisher needs the copyright or authorization from the party who has it. (This is why some publishers can get away with not taking copyright in the first place. As part of the submission process you sign agreements to give them the rights to distribute.)
      – R.M.
      Nov 12 at 14:05






    • 14




      The publisher absolutely does not need the copyright to distribute the paper. They merely need the permission of the copyright holder, which is much easier if that means "they merely need their own permission."
      – David Richerby
      Nov 12 at 14:05








    • 1




      @DavidRicherby Absolutely correct, though its noteworthy that type of permission is almost always referred to as a license.
      – TimothyAWiseman
      Nov 12 at 18:27













    up vote
    22
    down vote










    up vote
    22
    down vote









    Good question. As far as I can tell, the answer is "no" and the journal retracting the paper still retains copyright (if it was given the copyright in the first place).



    Here're some retraction policies: one, two, three. Although the question you ask is not discussed, two things can be noted:




    • Even if a paper is retracted, the publisher still distributes it (as in, it's still available from the journal's website). What changes is that the publisher makes it clear that the article is retracted.

    • The publisher only stops distributing the paper if they are legally obliged to do so (e.g. if the copyright is actually held by someone other than the authors, and the authors had no legal standing to sign the copyright to the publisher).


    Since the publisher needs the copyright (or permission from the copyright holder) to distribute the paper, the logical answer is "no".






    share|improve this answer














    Good question. As far as I can tell, the answer is "no" and the journal retracting the paper still retains copyright (if it was given the copyright in the first place).



    Here're some retraction policies: one, two, three. Although the question you ask is not discussed, two things can be noted:




    • Even if a paper is retracted, the publisher still distributes it (as in, it's still available from the journal's website). What changes is that the publisher makes it clear that the article is retracted.

    • The publisher only stops distributing the paper if they are legally obliged to do so (e.g. if the copyright is actually held by someone other than the authors, and the authors had no legal standing to sign the copyright to the publisher).


    Since the publisher needs the copyright (or permission from the copyright holder) to distribute the paper, the logical answer is "no".







    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited Nov 12 at 17:22

























    answered Nov 12 at 11:34









    Allure

    23k1371119




    23k1371119








    • 1




      Quick clarification on the last sentence. The publisher needs the copyright or authorization from the party who has it. (This is why some publishers can get away with not taking copyright in the first place. As part of the submission process you sign agreements to give them the rights to distribute.)
      – R.M.
      Nov 12 at 14:05






    • 14




      The publisher absolutely does not need the copyright to distribute the paper. They merely need the permission of the copyright holder, which is much easier if that means "they merely need their own permission."
      – David Richerby
      Nov 12 at 14:05








    • 1




      @DavidRicherby Absolutely correct, though its noteworthy that type of permission is almost always referred to as a license.
      – TimothyAWiseman
      Nov 12 at 18:27














    • 1




      Quick clarification on the last sentence. The publisher needs the copyright or authorization from the party who has it. (This is why some publishers can get away with not taking copyright in the first place. As part of the submission process you sign agreements to give them the rights to distribute.)
      – R.M.
      Nov 12 at 14:05






    • 14




      The publisher absolutely does not need the copyright to distribute the paper. They merely need the permission of the copyright holder, which is much easier if that means "they merely need their own permission."
      – David Richerby
      Nov 12 at 14:05








    • 1




      @DavidRicherby Absolutely correct, though its noteworthy that type of permission is almost always referred to as a license.
      – TimothyAWiseman
      Nov 12 at 18:27








    1




    1




    Quick clarification on the last sentence. The publisher needs the copyright or authorization from the party who has it. (This is why some publishers can get away with not taking copyright in the first place. As part of the submission process you sign agreements to give them the rights to distribute.)
    – R.M.
    Nov 12 at 14:05




    Quick clarification on the last sentence. The publisher needs the copyright or authorization from the party who has it. (This is why some publishers can get away with not taking copyright in the first place. As part of the submission process you sign agreements to give them the rights to distribute.)
    – R.M.
    Nov 12 at 14:05




    14




    14




    The publisher absolutely does not need the copyright to distribute the paper. They merely need the permission of the copyright holder, which is much easier if that means "they merely need their own permission."
    – David Richerby
    Nov 12 at 14:05






    The publisher absolutely does not need the copyright to distribute the paper. They merely need the permission of the copyright holder, which is much easier if that means "they merely need their own permission."
    – David Richerby
    Nov 12 at 14:05






    1




    1




    @DavidRicherby Absolutely correct, though its noteworthy that type of permission is almost always referred to as a license.
    – TimothyAWiseman
    Nov 12 at 18:27




    @DavidRicherby Absolutely correct, though its noteworthy that type of permission is almost always referred to as a license.
    – TimothyAWiseman
    Nov 12 at 18:27










    up vote
    8
    down vote













    Not automatically. Assuming this is a journal where authors assign them copyright, then the author has signed over the copyright and the article "belongs" to the publisher now. Whether they choose to publish it, retract it, or make and market paper aeroplanes from it is none of the author's concern.



    However, copyright transfer agreements sometimes (usually?) have a clause stating that if the journal doesn't publish it, copyright will revert to the author. I'm not sure whether that would apply in the event of a retraction, but the only way to tell would be to check the wording of that agreement.



    Disclaimer: IANAL, and this is not legal advice.






    share|improve this answer

























      up vote
      8
      down vote













      Not automatically. Assuming this is a journal where authors assign them copyright, then the author has signed over the copyright and the article "belongs" to the publisher now. Whether they choose to publish it, retract it, or make and market paper aeroplanes from it is none of the author's concern.



      However, copyright transfer agreements sometimes (usually?) have a clause stating that if the journal doesn't publish it, copyright will revert to the author. I'm not sure whether that would apply in the event of a retraction, but the only way to tell would be to check the wording of that agreement.



      Disclaimer: IANAL, and this is not legal advice.






      share|improve this answer























        up vote
        8
        down vote










        up vote
        8
        down vote









        Not automatically. Assuming this is a journal where authors assign them copyright, then the author has signed over the copyright and the article "belongs" to the publisher now. Whether they choose to publish it, retract it, or make and market paper aeroplanes from it is none of the author's concern.



        However, copyright transfer agreements sometimes (usually?) have a clause stating that if the journal doesn't publish it, copyright will revert to the author. I'm not sure whether that would apply in the event of a retraction, but the only way to tell would be to check the wording of that agreement.



        Disclaimer: IANAL, and this is not legal advice.






        share|improve this answer












        Not automatically. Assuming this is a journal where authors assign them copyright, then the author has signed over the copyright and the article "belongs" to the publisher now. Whether they choose to publish it, retract it, or make and market paper aeroplanes from it is none of the author's concern.



        However, copyright transfer agreements sometimes (usually?) have a clause stating that if the journal doesn't publish it, copyright will revert to the author. I'm not sure whether that would apply in the event of a retraction, but the only way to tell would be to check the wording of that agreement.



        Disclaimer: IANAL, and this is not legal advice.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Nov 12 at 11:32









        Flyto

        4,0241132




        4,0241132






















            up vote
            4
            down vote













            In general, no, but there is a lot of nuance to the question.



            First, you did not specify your jurisdiction. While many international treaties provide a degree of uniformity to copyright questions, there are significant differences between jurisdictions. For example, the U.S. is notorious for having very limited and weak "Moral Rights" while they are quite strong and significant in Canada. I am not actually aware of any differences in any jurisdiction that will make the answer to this question differ, but I cannot guarantee they do not exist. The best advice is that if you face this question in a way that will have real consequences, you should consult a qualified attorney in the jurisdiction in question



            With that said, nothing about retraction inherently relinquishes copyrights. In fact, under most circumstances, the copyright holder may elect to not publish something while still forbidding any others from publishing. In other words, a copyright holder may choose to use copyright to prevent any publication.



            However, this ultimately comes down to the contracts and specific statements involved. While I haven't ever seen this happen, a publisher could elect to disavow copyright (or release to the public domain) at the same time as they retract.



            Its also possible that the publication never held the copyright at all, but only held a license to distribute. This is in fact what I granted with my last publication rather than a transfer of the copyright.



            Even if the copyright is transferred to the publishers, there may be a clause that transfers it back if it is not published within the specified time or is withdrawn within that time (2 years is common).



            TLDR: Retraction does not by itself change the copyright and it is likely the publisher either continues to retain the copyright or an exclusive license to the article. But that is a rule of thumb rather than an absolute and you will have to evaluate the circumstances around any particular article individually.






            share|improve this answer



















            • 1




              +1; I've taken the liberty to correct what looked like typos.
              – darij grinberg
              Nov 12 at 22:53










            • @darijgrinberg Thank you.
              – TimothyAWiseman
              Nov 12 at 22:55















            up vote
            4
            down vote













            In general, no, but there is a lot of nuance to the question.



            First, you did not specify your jurisdiction. While many international treaties provide a degree of uniformity to copyright questions, there are significant differences between jurisdictions. For example, the U.S. is notorious for having very limited and weak "Moral Rights" while they are quite strong and significant in Canada. I am not actually aware of any differences in any jurisdiction that will make the answer to this question differ, but I cannot guarantee they do not exist. The best advice is that if you face this question in a way that will have real consequences, you should consult a qualified attorney in the jurisdiction in question



            With that said, nothing about retraction inherently relinquishes copyrights. In fact, under most circumstances, the copyright holder may elect to not publish something while still forbidding any others from publishing. In other words, a copyright holder may choose to use copyright to prevent any publication.



            However, this ultimately comes down to the contracts and specific statements involved. While I haven't ever seen this happen, a publisher could elect to disavow copyright (or release to the public domain) at the same time as they retract.



            Its also possible that the publication never held the copyright at all, but only held a license to distribute. This is in fact what I granted with my last publication rather than a transfer of the copyright.



            Even if the copyright is transferred to the publishers, there may be a clause that transfers it back if it is not published within the specified time or is withdrawn within that time (2 years is common).



            TLDR: Retraction does not by itself change the copyright and it is likely the publisher either continues to retain the copyright or an exclusive license to the article. But that is a rule of thumb rather than an absolute and you will have to evaluate the circumstances around any particular article individually.






            share|improve this answer



















            • 1




              +1; I've taken the liberty to correct what looked like typos.
              – darij grinberg
              Nov 12 at 22:53










            • @darijgrinberg Thank you.
              – TimothyAWiseman
              Nov 12 at 22:55













            up vote
            4
            down vote










            up vote
            4
            down vote









            In general, no, but there is a lot of nuance to the question.



            First, you did not specify your jurisdiction. While many international treaties provide a degree of uniformity to copyright questions, there are significant differences between jurisdictions. For example, the U.S. is notorious for having very limited and weak "Moral Rights" while they are quite strong and significant in Canada. I am not actually aware of any differences in any jurisdiction that will make the answer to this question differ, but I cannot guarantee they do not exist. The best advice is that if you face this question in a way that will have real consequences, you should consult a qualified attorney in the jurisdiction in question



            With that said, nothing about retraction inherently relinquishes copyrights. In fact, under most circumstances, the copyright holder may elect to not publish something while still forbidding any others from publishing. In other words, a copyright holder may choose to use copyright to prevent any publication.



            However, this ultimately comes down to the contracts and specific statements involved. While I haven't ever seen this happen, a publisher could elect to disavow copyright (or release to the public domain) at the same time as they retract.



            Its also possible that the publication never held the copyright at all, but only held a license to distribute. This is in fact what I granted with my last publication rather than a transfer of the copyright.



            Even if the copyright is transferred to the publishers, there may be a clause that transfers it back if it is not published within the specified time or is withdrawn within that time (2 years is common).



            TLDR: Retraction does not by itself change the copyright and it is likely the publisher either continues to retain the copyright or an exclusive license to the article. But that is a rule of thumb rather than an absolute and you will have to evaluate the circumstances around any particular article individually.






            share|improve this answer














            In general, no, but there is a lot of nuance to the question.



            First, you did not specify your jurisdiction. While many international treaties provide a degree of uniformity to copyright questions, there are significant differences between jurisdictions. For example, the U.S. is notorious for having very limited and weak "Moral Rights" while they are quite strong and significant in Canada. I am not actually aware of any differences in any jurisdiction that will make the answer to this question differ, but I cannot guarantee they do not exist. The best advice is that if you face this question in a way that will have real consequences, you should consult a qualified attorney in the jurisdiction in question



            With that said, nothing about retraction inherently relinquishes copyrights. In fact, under most circumstances, the copyright holder may elect to not publish something while still forbidding any others from publishing. In other words, a copyright holder may choose to use copyright to prevent any publication.



            However, this ultimately comes down to the contracts and specific statements involved. While I haven't ever seen this happen, a publisher could elect to disavow copyright (or release to the public domain) at the same time as they retract.



            Its also possible that the publication never held the copyright at all, but only held a license to distribute. This is in fact what I granted with my last publication rather than a transfer of the copyright.



            Even if the copyright is transferred to the publishers, there may be a clause that transfers it back if it is not published within the specified time or is withdrawn within that time (2 years is common).



            TLDR: Retraction does not by itself change the copyright and it is likely the publisher either continues to retain the copyright or an exclusive license to the article. But that is a rule of thumb rather than an absolute and you will have to evaluate the circumstances around any particular article individually.







            share|improve this answer














            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer








            edited yesterday

























            answered Nov 12 at 18:33









            TimothyAWiseman

            25817




            25817








            • 1




              +1; I've taken the liberty to correct what looked like typos.
              – darij grinberg
              Nov 12 at 22:53










            • @darijgrinberg Thank you.
              – TimothyAWiseman
              Nov 12 at 22:55














            • 1




              +1; I've taken the liberty to correct what looked like typos.
              – darij grinberg
              Nov 12 at 22:53










            • @darijgrinberg Thank you.
              – TimothyAWiseman
              Nov 12 at 22:55








            1




            1




            +1; I've taken the liberty to correct what looked like typos.
            – darij grinberg
            Nov 12 at 22:53




            +1; I've taken the liberty to correct what looked like typos.
            – darij grinberg
            Nov 12 at 22:53












            @darijgrinberg Thank you.
            – TimothyAWiseman
            Nov 12 at 22:55




            @darijgrinberg Thank you.
            – TimothyAWiseman
            Nov 12 at 22:55


















             

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