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photoyogi
Participating Frequently
August 21, 2023
Question

ps glitch putting © before title but this is NOT showing up in finder and NOT what I want

  • August 21, 2023
  • 2 replies
  • 133 views

strange thing happened today. I named a ps file, and this file name shows up correctly when in the finder. When I tried to upload it to my website and it would not upload. Then I went to open the image again in PS  and very strange that it shows © in front of the title but the is not in the title, nor shows up in the finder. Makes no sense. Any idea why or how to resolve?

 

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2 replies

Conrad_C
Community Expert
Community Expert
August 21, 2023

It’s not unusual or new. You may have noticed that for many years, the document title bar contains at least 7 different types of information, 6 of which have never been expected to be part of the filename.

 

 

What is found in a typical document tab are, as seen from left to right:

Copyright Status metadata field is set to Copyrighted

Filename

Current view magnification

Selected layer

Color mode

Bit depth

Document contains unsaved changes (*)

quote

Makes no sense.

By @photoyogi


So, going by the above list which is not in any way new, we know that having non-filename info in the document tab is not some strange new thing, so it does make sense. The real question here is about what the © at the beginning is for.

 

The © means that in File > File Info, the Copyright Status metadata field is set to Copyrighted.

 

 

This may seem trivial, but in some legal jurisdictions such as the USA, whether or not a copyright notice is saved with the file can mean the difference between whether or not a court will award you a significant financial remedy for a copyright infringement. For those wanting to ensure a maximum possible financial remedy, making sure that © is in the document tab could mean real money, so for them it’s a nice reminder. But of course it works best if the Copyright Notice field is also filled out, according to the requirements of your legal jurisdiction.

D Fosse
Community Expert
Community Expert
August 21, 2023

That means the image has been marked as copyrighted in the file's metadata. Look in File > File Info.

 

Any image is automatically copyrighted to the creator from the moment it's created, so a copyright symbol is strictly speaking redundant. Copyright always applies, unless a Creative Commons license has been imposed by the author. That overrules and releases the copyright, according to the specific CC terms.