Copyright Lawyers for Amazon & E-Commerce Brands
If someone copied your photos, A+ content, listing copy, manuals, infographics, or videos, the fastest fix is an evidence-first submission: identify the exact copyrighted work, map it to the exact infringing URLs/ASINs, and submit a clean, policy-matched notice.
Bring your links, screenshots, and original files—we’ll map the safest, fastest resolution path.
Quick answer: Do I need a copyright lawyer?
You usually need a copyright lawyer when (1) someone copied your photos, A+ content, videos, manuals, or packaging graphics, (2) your takedown was ignored or met with a counter-notice, or (3) your own content/listing was removed after a complaint. The fastest path is an evidence-first DMCA submission tied to the exact URLs/ASINs—plus a dispute-ready plan if escalation is required.
Important: copyright protects original expression (photos, graphics, text, videos)—not patents (inventions) or trademarks (brand names/logos).
What copyright protects for e-commerce
Copyright protects original expression—not your product idea. For online brands, that usually means the assets that drive clicks and conversions.
- Product photos (studio + lifestyle images)
- A+ content, brand story graphics, and infographics
- Listing copy and original written descriptions
- Videos (product demos, ads, social clips)
- Manuals, inserts, diagrams, and instruction sheets
- Packaging graphics and original layout/design elements
Not copyright: inventions/functional ideas (patents) or brand names/logos (trademarks).
Why copyright matters on marketplaces
When competitors copy your assets, they can siphon conversions, confuse buyers, and weaken your brand. Clean evidence + a tight submission usually gets faster action.
- Stops copy-paste theft of photos, A+, videos, and manuals
- Improves takedown outcomes by tying the exact work to exact URLs/ASINs
- Creates leverage for demand letters or negotiated resolution (when appropriate)
- Protects brand value across Amazon and other marketplaces
How to report infringement (DMCA) so it actually works
- Identify the copyrighted work: name the exact assets (photo set, A+ module, infographic, manual pages, or video).
- Prove ownership: source files, timestamps, creator agreements, licenses/assignments.
- Map the infringement: provide exact infringing URLs/ASINs and (if helpful) side-by-side screenshots.
- Submit a clean notice: short, specific, and aligned with the platform’s form requirements.
- Plan for a counter-notice: decide now what you’ll do if the other side disputes ownership.
What infringement looks like on a listing
Copied images, A+ graphics, manuals, and videos reused under a different seller are the most common patterns we see.
Counter-notices: what happens next
A counter-notice is the other side’s claim that the content was removed by mistake or misidentification. If a counter-notice is filed, content may be restored unless you have a dispute-ready plan.
- Ownership proof is decisive (source files + contracts)
- Narrow issues to the specific assets that were copied
- Choose the safest next step based on risk, leverage, and business impact
Wrongful removals: restore your content
If your listing images, A+ content, or video were removed after a complaint, don’t guess. First identify the claim type, then respond narrowly with proof.
- Confirm claim type: copyright vs trademark vs patent vs policy
- List the exact removed assets and where they were used
- Attach clean proof: originals, licenses, assignments, creator agreements
- Respond like a checklist: short, specific, evidence-tied
Prevent repeat copying (practical checklist)
- Keep source files (RAW images, PSD/AI, editable video projects, drafts)
- Use creator agreements that clearly assign ownership to your brand
- Register core assets early (hero photo sets, manuals, key videos)
- Monitor routinely and preserve evidence before content changes
- Standardize an evidence packet (one folder with links, originals, timestamps)
Where to get help with copyright disputes
AMZ Sellers Attorney® provides attorney-supervised support for:
- Copyright registration strategy for core brand assets
- DMCA takedowns for copied photos, A+, manuals, and videos
- Counter-notice response strategy and escalation planning
- Wrongful removal disputes (restore your content/listing assets)
- Cross-marketplace enforcement planning (Amazon and beyond)
Need help fast? Request a free consultation.
Video: Amazon Copyright Protection (DMCA + Dispute Strategy)
Full FAQ: Copyright on Amazon & E-Commerce
What does copyright protect for e-commerce brands?
Copyright protects original expression such as photos, A+ content, written descriptions, manuals, graphics, and videos. It does not protect functional product ideas (patents) or brand names/logos (trademarks).
Do I need a copyright registration to file a DMCA takedown?
You can often submit a DMCA notice without registration, but registration can strengthen your position—especially if the dispute escalates. A practical approach is registering your highest-value assets early and keeping clean proof of ownership.
Why do DMCA takedowns fail on Amazon?
The most common reason is vagueness: “they copied my listing” without identifying the exact work and linking it to exact infringing URLs/ASINs. Specificity + proof wins faster.
What is a counter-notice?
A counter-notice is the accused party’s claim the removal was a mistake or misidentification. Platforms may restore content after a counter-notice unless you have a dispute-ready plan and strong ownership proof.
My listing content was removed. What should I do first?
Identify the claim type (copyright vs trademark vs patent vs policy). Then respond narrowly with the exact removed assets, exact URLs/ASINs, and clean ownership proof (source files, licenses/assignments, creator agreements).
Is copying product photos always infringement?
Copying original photos is often infringement, but outcomes depend on who owns the rights and whether any license exists. Keep photographer/agency agreements and source files to prove ownership quickly.
Can copyright help with hijackers or unauthorized sellers?
Copyright is strongest for stolen creative assets (photos, A+, videos, manuals). Removing hijackers depends on the underlying issue—counterfeit, trademark misuse, or policy violations—so enforcement often works best as a combined strategy.
Do you help outside Amazon?
Yes. We plan enforcement across major marketplaces and brand channels, subject to each platform’s process and requirements.
Stop Stolen Listing Assets and Protect Your Content
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Get Your Free Strategy Review© 2026 AMZ Sellers Attorney®. General information only; not legal advice.
