Are there copyright issues with using a recipe on a product?
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03-22-2023 01:32 PM
Are there copyright issues with recipes? For example, what if I want to use something readily available online, like the Nestle Tollhouse recipe. Or a recipe that is pretty generic like sugar cookies. Can I use these? Thx!
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03-22-2023 02:02 PM
I would absolutely NOT use something like Nestle Tollhouse recipes as I'm sure both "Nestle" and "Nestle Tollhouse" are trademarked - so your product would likely get deleted by the contact management team. In terms of something more "generic" I think I'd be inclined to at least tweak the recipe a bit so it's not exactly the same as something published in a popular cookbook or anything like that.
Cat @ ZB Designs
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03-22-2023 02:27 PM - edited 03-22-2023 02:28 PM
You definitely cannot use brand names... but single recipes themselves are very rarely copyright eligible.
https://copyrightalliance.org/are-recipes-cookbooks-protected-by-copyright/
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03-22-2023 03:03 PM - edited 03-22-2023 03:26 PM
@LindaS1
good info here about copyright and recipes—-
<https://www.copyrightlaws.com/copyright-protection-recipes/>
Recipe books can hold copyright.
Btw, just because something is “readily available on the internet” DOES NOT mean it is not registered with the copyright office. Also, brand names are trademarked, look for their trade mark which is their mark of trade next to the name , the TM symbol or the R symbol.
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03-22-2023 05:38 PM - edited 03-22-2023 05:55 PM
Recipe books can and do hold copyright, but as @PenguinPower said, the recipes themselves usually can't. But crediting the source of the recipe could bring issues with trademark infringement, and using the recipe without giving credit might be considered plagiarism (which is a different issue than copyright infringement).
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03-22-2023 06:46 PM
@LindaS1
Copyright info about recipes which may have appeared in a recipe book—-
since there is no way to determine if any particular recipe was ever in a recipe book…it’s iffy.
How do I protect my recipe?
A mere listing of ingredients is not protected under copyright law. However, where a recipe or formula is accompanied by substantial literary expression in the form of an explanation or directions, or when there is a collection of recipes as in a cookbook, there may be a basis for copyright protection.. See Circular 33, Works Not Protected by Copyright
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03-22-2023 09:02 PM
It’s the book/collection as a whole that may become copyrighted material, the individual recipes are generally still not eligible unless the writing goes above and beyond just instructions.
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03-23-2023 04:11 AM
Agree with @Cat . Maybe put one of your own recipes as sample text and allow the customer to edit it for their own recipe?
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03-23-2023 02:36 PM
Thank you, everyone! I used a generic oatmeal raisin recipe and changed the wording a bit. Customers can replace with their own recipe if they want to.
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03-24-2023 10:34 AM
This is a simple kitchen poster I created that was designed so customers could use their own favorite recipes. I'm showing it, not because it's a hot seller (it isn't), but because it may work for you as a jumping-off point:

