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The 7 Deadly Myths of Internet
Copyright
Myth1
| Myth2
|Myth3
|Myth4
| Myth5
| Myth6
| Myth7
by Attorney
David L. Amkraut
WARNING: The following is a summary of important
information regarding the use and misuse of photos and videos on the Internet. It is
not specific legal advice. Copyright is a specialized field of law, and
there are sometimes exceptions to the rules. If you have a specific
copyright concern, you should consult a lawyer with expertise in copyright
issues concerning the use and misuse of photos on the Internet.
AN
EXCELLENT RULE OF THUMB: If you do not have specific permission
(preferably written!) from the owner of a photo, you cannot legally
display it on a website, post it to the Usenet, copy it, send it around by
Email or other means, make photos derived from it, sell it, or otherwise
exploit it.
MYTH # 1.
"I do not
need to register my photos with the copyright office, because I
'automatically' have copyright at the instant I snap the
shutter."
This is a serious misunderstanding of the law. Yes, you
do own copyright without registration. BUT if you want to protect your
photos from theft, you should register them with the Copyright Office,
before you publish or distribute them. If you register your photos, you
gain powerful remedies against infringers. These can include:
* Civil
penalties ("damages"). The pirate is on the hook for up to $150,000 for
each misused photo;
* Attorney's fees: the infringer has to pay your
attorney's hourly fees and all costs such as copies, postage, filing fees,
etc.
* Restraining orders, Preliminary and Permanent Injunctions
against the infringer, and even seizure of the pirate's computer equipment
in some cases.
An important practical point is that if the photos
are registered, you might find an attorney to take the case on
"contingency," which means he takes the risk of gambling on a win, rather
than you paying him by the hour. Faced with a lawsuit over registered
images-and an injunction which would likely mean being put out of business
forever-many pirates will quickly settle up and pay.
By contrast,
if you did not register your photos, it is almost impossible, as a
practical matter, to nail an infringer. To get any damages at all, you
have to prove how much the pirate made off your particular photos, or
exactly how much money the theft cost you. Either is almost impossible to
prove. And you do not recover attorney's fees, so the cost of the lawsuit
would far outweigh your possible recovery.
So-if you have
registered your work, you are in good shape to "convince" an infringer to
stop, or to successfully sue him. If you have not registered, you probably
cannot do anything about pirates.
MYTH #
2.
"I got the photo off the Usenet (newsgroups) so it is in the
'Public Domain'."
The above shows a misunderstanding of the term
"Public Domain." The term has the specific legal meaning that no one
controls the photo; anyone can use it as he wishes. There are two ways for
a photo to fall into in the public domain.
* the owner clearly gives up
his rights, such as by signing a document saying, "I now give up my
copyright and irrevocably place this work in the public domain." OR
*
75 Years have passed since the owner died.
When an owner posts a
photo to Usenet, he does not lose his rights, any more than publishing the
photo in a magazine or on his own website would. When an owner posts to
Usenet, the only license he gives is for replication and transmission
within the Usenet system. There have been many copyright cases involving
websites which got their content from the Usenet-and courts have awarded
fines in the millions of dollars against the pirates.
In addition,
photos are often posted to Usenet against the owner's wishes. Eg., the
many infringing copies of work owned by Playboy, Penthouse, and top
photographers. Such posts are themselves violations of copyright.
Obviously if the original post to Usenet was illegal-as many
are-subsequent copying and misuse is equally illegal.
In short,
taking photos from Usenet and using them elsewhere such as on a website is
copyright infringement, and you risk the severe penalties of
piracy.
MYTH # 3.
"My [website use,
posting, whatever] is 'Fair Use' so I haven't violated
copyright"
"Fair use" is a legal "defense" to copyright. It was
created to allow use of copyright material for socially valuable purposes
such as commentary, parody, news reporting, education and the like,
without permission of the copyright holder. A typical instance would be a
brief quotation from a book as part of a book review. Uses allowed by
"Fair Use" are normally a small part of a work and include an author
credit and attribution. Fair uses are generally for non-profit purposes.
Fair use is rarely allowed where the use competes directly with the work
or harms its commercial value.
Most fair use situations involve
text. It is difficult to imagine any situation involving the Internet
where someone copying a photo could claim the fair use defense.
In
typical infringement activities, such as unauthorized posting to Usenet,
stocking websites from Usenet trolling, scanning from Playboy magazine, or
simply copying from other websites-the fair use doctrine does not apply.
Because the pirate is taking 100% of the work, not acknowledging the
creator, hurting the work's market value, competing directly with the
creator or licensed users of the work, and for other reasons.
So if
you are a photo pirate, do not even think about the fair use doctrine. In
your context it is a myth. Your lawyer will laugh at you, and the judge
might not have a sense of humor where thievery is concerned.
MYTH # 4.
"If it does not have a copyright notice
on it, it is not copyrighted-so I can use it freely."
This myth
results from past law, and misunderstandings of past law being passed
along. In virtually all cases, photo copyright is valid whether or not
there is a copyright notice.
A copyright notice has two main
functions. First, it warns off at least a few would-be pirates that the
work is not to be stolen. Second, it has some useful legal effects,
because it prevents the infringer from claiming he was making an
"innocent" mistake.
The copyright notice may be omitted because the
owner or legitimate user does not want to deface the photo, or even
because an intermediary infringer has deliberately removed the notice.
(Removing a copyright notice is itself a serious legal violation.) And of
course, if someone has illegally scanned and posted Playboy pictures or
the like, there will not be a notice. However, the absence of a copyright
notice does not change the fact that a work is copyrighted.
We are
reminded of an anecdote about a thief who stole a bicycle from a public
place. When caught by the owner, the thief protested, "I didn't know that
it was your bike." Replied the owner, "You sure as blazes knew that it
wasn't yours!"
A proper notice has the © mark, or word "Copyright"
or abbreviation "Copr."; the year, and the name of the owner. For example,
if this author took and published a photo in 2000, it might be marked "©
2000 David L. Amkraut" or "Copyright 2000 David L. Amkraut" or "Copr. 2000
David L. Amkraut." You can add "All Rights Reserved" if you want-it has no
real significance in the U.S. and most countries but has a bit in several
3rd world countries. The commonly-seen parenthesis "(c)" instead of the
proper copyright mark "©" has no legal significance and may invalidate the
notice.
So, if you do not see a copyright notice, do not assume the
photo is yours to use; someone owns copyright and you have to get his
permission before using it.
MYTH #
5.
"If I am not making money off the photos, I am not violating
copyright."
Copyright infringement is not excused if you are doing
it for some reason other than profit, such as malice or the collectivist
notion that an individual's creative work "should be free for all to
share." These are the typical motives of some people who post thousands of
Playboy photos to newsgroups. The court may fine you more or treat you
more harshly if you have a profit motive. But you can still get
punished-badly-if your actions are harming the commercial value of the
infringed pictures. Or if you infringed "knowingly" or "willfully." Or if
the judge thinks it appropriate to "send a warning" to discourage other
would-be infringers.
Violating copyright is illegal whether you do
it for money, love, competitive advantage, malice, or any other
reason.
MYTH # 6.
"I'll win. I have
a lot of rights in court. And they can not do much to me
anyhow."
Very wrong. A pirate is far more likely to be sued in
civil court than to be arrested and criminally charged. As a civil
defendant you have far fewer rights than in a criminal case. The Plaintiff
only has to convince the judge that he is more right than you. He does not
have the heavy burden of "beyond a reasonable doubt" as in a criminal
case.
A copyright Plaintiff does not have to prove much to win. He
just needs to show two things: (1) Ownership of the copied work; and (2)
Copying or other misuse by the Defendant. He proves the first by showing
his Certificate of Registration from the copyright office. He proves the
second by showing his photos and your infringing copy side-by-side. End of
story.
And a copyright suit, in federal court, moves surprisingly
quickly. You could be slapped with a restraining order immediately after
the suit is filed, meaning an end to your infringements under threat of
arrest for contempt of court. For technical reasons having to do with the
copyright law and federal rules of procedure, final judgments may be
reached within a few months.
Perhaps you think you can charm or
fool a jury? If the facts and issues are clear-and they generally are in
such cases-the judge will decide the case. You will never see a
jury.
Think you can fight it? Talk to a copyright specialist
attorney and think of paying by the hour for what will probably be a
hopeless defense. And do not forget, Mr. Pirate, that when you lose you
will also be stuck for the Plaintiff's legal fees.
Can they "do
much" to you? Copyright penalties have been called "nuclear." Penalties of
up to $150,000 per photo are permitted. And an injunction which, depending
on your business method, may put you out of business forever, is
likely.
Do not assume you can successfully defend a legitimate
copyright case, especially when registered photos are concerned. As a rule
of thumb, if you get caught, better try to settle cheap and
quickly.
MYTH # 7.
"Copyright
violation is not a crime-it is just a quarrel between two
businessmen."
Wrong. Copyright violation is a crime as well as a
civil wrong. Read the splash screen disclaimer at the start of any video
you rent if you think otherwise. Or talk with an FBI agent. Most of the
copyright cases we see are federal felonies, as well as civil law
violations.
In addition to the severe civil and criminal penalties
of copyright violations, the same acts leave the pirate open to additional
civil and criminal charges, for wrongdoing like "unfair competition," and
violation of the "No Electronic Theft" law and other statutes.
We
are not saying that a pirate can expect to be arrested by FBI agents for
his theft of photos. But it is a possibility, especially if the FBI
responds to demands for action against Internet pirates and begins
pursuing such cases more actively. And especially if the pirate is
infringing on a large scale or infringing work owned by a large
corporation.
SUMMARY
Unless you
have specific permission, you can not distribute, copy, publicly display,
sell, or otherwise exploit or commercially use someone else's
photos.
Photos posted on newsgroups are not yours to use. They are
not in the "public domain." In fact, with extremely rare exceptions, no
recently-created photo is in the public domain.
The "Fair Use"
doctrine almost never excuses infringement of a photograph, particularly
where the infringing use is commercial or where it hurts the market for
the photo.
Copyright is normally valid with or without a copyright
notice.
Copyright infringement is copyright infringement regardless
of the infringer's motive.
People who infringe photographs are
likely to be crushed in Court, and even have their businesses closed
down.
Copyright violation may be treated as a serious crime, as
well as a civil wrong.
ABOUT THE
AUTHOR
David L. Amkraut is a Los Angeles-based Attorney at law.
His practice emphasizes cutting-edge Internet-related copyright matters,
especially cases involving photographs. He was attorney for the Plaintiffs
in Louder v. CompuServe, a class-action case involving publication of 930
photographs of models by the 2nd-largest Internet Service Provider in the
world. Recently he served as counsel in KNB v. Matthews, an important case
about the relationship between copyright and the "Right of Publicity." He
has repeatedly obtained judgments in the hundreds of thousands of dollars
and represents some of the best-known glamour photographers against web
sites which infringe their work.
CONTACT INFORMATION
Email:
CopyrightFacts@Earthlink.net
Fax: (818) 637-7809
Mail: Law
Offices of David L. Amkraut
2272 Colorado Blvd., #1228
Los Angeles,
CA 90041
© 2000 David L. Amkraut - All
rights reserved. Permission granted to reproduce this document provided
the document is reproduced in its entirety, including the information
about the author and his contact information, and this copyright notice.
Quotations for review, reportage, etc. are permitted as long as there is
proper attribution and full contact information as follows:
"From
The 7 Deadly Myths of Internet Copyright,
by Los Angeles Attorney David
L. Amkraut
Email: CopyrightFacts@Earthlink.net
Fax:
(818) 637-7809
Law Offices of David L. Amkraut
2272 Colorado
Blvd., #1228
Los Angeles, CA
90041">
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