CANNABIS COPYRIGHT & MARKETING COMPLIANCE
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Top 20 California Cannabis Lawyers
The Daily Journal

Global Top 200 Cannabis Lawyer
Cannabis Law Journal
Copyright Basics for Cannabis Brands
Copyright Protection for Cannabis vs. Hemp Content
| Content Type | Copyright Available | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Packaging and label design | Yes | Original artistic elements protected; required regulatory text is not |
| Product photography | Yes | Original photos protected; work-for-hire clause required if photographer is contractor |
| Website copy and blog content | Yes | Protected; ensure assignment from any outside writer |
| Video content and tutorials | Yes | Script, performance, and audiovisual elements each separately protectable |
| Cannabis strain names | Generally no | Names/titles generally not copyrightable; trademark or trade secret protection may apply |
| Proprietary menus and price lists | Limited | May qualify if sufficient originality in compilation |
| Social media posts and graphics | Yes | Original expression protected; ownership depends on employment vs. contractor status |
The Work-for-Hire Problem in Cannabis Marketing
One of the most common — and most consequential — copyright mistakes made by cannabis companies is failing to secure a written work-for-hire agreement or copyright assignment from freelance designers, photographers, copywriters, and marketing agencies. Under U.S. copyright law (17 U.S.C. § 101), a work created by an independent contractor (as opposed to a regular employee) is owned by the contractor, not the company that paid for it, unless: (1) the parties have a written agreement expressly designating the work as a “work made for hire,” or (2) the contractor executes a written copyright assignment. A cannabis brand that has paid thousands of dollars for a logo, packaging design, or website without a written agreement may not legally own that content — and a departing contractor or agency may assert copyright ownership or withhold rights as leverage in a payment dispute.
The fix is simple and inexpensive when addressed proactively: every agreement with a freelancer, designer, photographer, copywriter, or marketing agency should include either a work-for-hire clause (for qualifying categories of works) or a copyright assignment clause transferring all rights to the company. These provisions should also include a waiver of moral rights to the extent permitted by law, and should cover derivative works — updated versions, social media adaptations, and modified formats.
California Cannabis Advertising and Marketing Compliance
California’s cannabis marketing regulations — administered by the DCC under the California Code of Regulations and Business and Professions Code — impose significant restrictions on how cannabis companies can use their copyrighted content. The principal rules include:
- Age-gating requirement: All cannabis advertising directed at a general audience must target consumers where at least 71.6% of the audience is reasonably expected to be 21 or older. Direct individual communications (email, SMS, app notifications) must include age verification. (Bus. & Prof. Code § 26151)
- Youth appeal prohibition: Cannabis products, advertising, marketing, packaging, and labeling must not resemble, use, or mimic characters, images, or phrases commonly used to advertise to children, including cartoons, candy-like imagery, or child-targeted mascots. (DCC Regulations; MAUCRSA)
- Health and medical claims: Cannabis advertising may not include any health claim unless it is truthful, not misleading, and substantiated.
- Branded merchandise: California licensed cannabis businesses may use branded merchandise (clothing, accessories, promotional items) for marketing, subject to the same age-targeting and youth-appeal restrictions applicable to all cannabis advertising.
- Billboard and outdoor advertising restrictions: Cannabis billboards are prohibited on interstate and state highways crossing California’s borders. Local road billboards are permissible in some jurisdictions but must comply with 1,000-foot setback requirements from schools, day care centers, playgrounds, and youth centers.
These restrictions have direct copyright implications: copyrighted content that complies with these rules in one channel may not comply in another, and licensing arrangements must specify permitted channels and include compliance obligations for licensees.
Representative Matters
Medterra CBD, LLC — Hemp and Cannabinoid Brand Marketing Compliance (Publishable): Represented Medterra CBD, LLC in connection with California Assembly legislation affecting online cannabis and hemp retail platforms, including advising on the marketing and advertising compliance implications of the proposed legislation for the brand’s existing content and digital marketing practices. The bill, first of its kind in the United States at the time of the engagement, raised significant questions about online cannabis and hemp advertising standards and platform liability.
Cannabis Operator — DCC Branded Merchandise Compliance (Generalized): Advised a licensed California cannabis retailer on compliance with DCC advertising regulations for a branded merchandise program, including analysis of permissible marketing channels, age-targeting requirements, packaging requirements for branded items, and youth-appeal prohibitions applicable to clothing, accessories, and promotional materials.

