Copyright and titles
Basic principles
Copyright does not protect individual names, titles or phrases.
Such items may easily be duplicated by coincidence, and are therefore not considered unique or substantial enough to be awarded copyright protection in their own right. Copyright laws are actually quite restrictive, so it would be counter productive to apply these laws to items that may be duplicated coincidentally, or that may be legitimately used in unrelated instances, (such as a name, title or phrase).
As an real life example, ‘Who Dares Wins’ is the title of novels by Tony Geraghty, Peter Legge, Laurie Matthew and probably many more authors. This is not a breach of copyright. It is the novels themselves that are subject to copyright, not their titles.
For a full explanation of this you may wish to see the following fact sheet: P-18 Names, titles and copyright.
Copyright registration and titles
We cannot accept registrations that only consist of a title, as copyright would not apply to the title itself there would no real value in a registration that only consisted of a title.
Related questions
I just have the title and outline for a script or story, can I register?
Yes. You can register as soon as you have some work in a tangible form. This can be particularly important if your are approaching outside parties (i.e. publishers, agents, etc.) before the work is fully complete. So it is possible to register the work to date, even if you only have a outline (synopsis or similar)
It is quite normal to register a 'work in progress'. As the work evolves, you can use our registration update facility to lodge more complete, or finished versions, to ensure they are also covered under the registration.
Further information
The following pages and fact sheets provide further information which you may find useful.