ナイジェリアのクリエイターのための作品保護ガイド
Prima Evidence
主要な発見
クリエイティブ経済のナイジェリアGDPへの貢献
72億ドル
Nigerian creators are producing some of the most original, influential work in the world. Afrobeats is dominating global charts. Nollywood is the second-largest film industry by volume. Lagos is a fashion capital. Yet the infrastructure for protecting this work is almost nonexistent.
What Nigerian Copyright Law Actually Covers
Nigeria's Copyright Act protects literary, musical, artistic, cinematographic, and sound recording works automatically upon creation. You don't need to register for copyright to exist. However, the Nigerian Copyright Commission (NCC) offers voluntary registration, which can strengthen your position in disputes.
The challenge: NCC registration is slow, not widely used, and enforcement is difficult. In practice, most Nigerian creators have zero formal protection for their work.
The Real-World Problem
Beats shared on WhatsApp end up on someone else's record. Designs sent to clients get "adapted" without credit. Scripts pitched to producers reappear under a different writer's name. Fashion sketches are copied by manufacturers before the original collection launches.
In each case, the creator knows they made it first. But proving it — especially in a context where formal legal action is slow and expensive — is a different story entirely.
Practical Steps for Nigerian Creators
First: timestamp everything before it leaves your device. Every beat, every design, every script draft. A blockchain timestamp costs less than a data bundle and creates permanent, internationally verifiable proof of when your file existed.
Second: maintain a creation journal. Even a simple note in your phone documenting what you created and when adds a supporting layer of evidence.
Third: use watermarks and metadata for public-facing work. These are easy to strip, but they signal ownership and can support your case.
Fourth: for high-value works, register with the Nigerian Copyright Commission. It's slow, but it creates an official record that carries weight in Nigerian courts.
Why Blockchain Timestamps Matter for Nigerian Creators
Blockchain timestamps are jurisdiction-neutral. They don't depend on the NCC, the Nigerian court system, or any single institution. A timestamp created in Lagos is equally verifiable in London, Los Angeles, or Tokyo.
For Nigerian creators who are increasingly working with international collaborators, labels, brands, and platforms, this matters. Your proof needs to work everywhere your work goes.
The cost is a fraction of what you'd pay for any other form of legal protection. And the time investment — 30 seconds per file — is negligible compared to the months of frustration that follow when you can't prove something you created is yours.
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発行元
Prima Evidence