|
Can we protect our tiny images from commercial piracy? Thumbs Up ?
Thumbs Down? Advance Notes: Your thumb-nail size photos on the Web - can someone else grab them and use them for their own profit? In the last decade, few persons believed someone could "borrow" them for Who says a thumbnail photo can't be swiped from the Internet? Could a legitimate company swipe thousands of thumbnail-size images and sell them, say, for advertising, to a cell phone company for downloading? And still be legal? Well, presently they could, if they went through an innocent major search engine that featured image-search. This is the story of an adult-content company (Perfect-10) who leases (for $$$$) thumbnail-sized "adult pictures" to a British cell phone entity (Fonestarz Media Ltd.), obtaining those pictures for free from displays of photos on major search engine websites such as Google. Thumbnails can now be marketed on the Web in a number of ways, so this now presents a problem for stock photographers. A brief history: Over the years we have reported on this question. In 2003 a California photographer, Leslie Kelly, sued a company called (at that time) Arriba Soft, and asked, "Can a search engine tap into photographers' web photos and display them on their own search engine website?" The case took several years to decide. The courts finally came up with an answer (in layman's terms): "Yes, web search engines can display a photographer's images, if they use them in a 'thumbnail format.'" That's why we see Google and the other search engines freely displaying the photos of photographers (and non-photographers) on the search engines' websites in small (thumbnail) low-res format, with no legal problems. But technology changes. In the early days of the automobile it might have been legal to place your arm out of the window of your car to signal which way you were about to turn. But with the invention of electronic turn signals, it eventually became illegal to use your arm for the signal. You are required now to have a working turn signal on the car you drive. A faulty one could lead to a fine. Who knows what future technological changes hold in store for the rules of the road. Such a change has come to stock photography. Thumbnails are used all over on the Internet, and to date, there have been few objections by photographers because they have served, usually, as mini-publicity points for the photographers. We've all thought, until recently, that thumbnails don't qualify technically to be able to be used for commercial purposes. We as photographers have been conditioned to believe thumbnails are "safe" from thievery. Here at PhotoSource International, we've heard of no thumbnail copyright infringement cases in the last decade, except for the Leslie Kelly case. But a recent court case has beamed a new light on this subject. The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals originally handled the Kelly complaints. They are taking a second look. The recent case, Perfect 10 v. Google, Inc., brought in the United States District Court for the Central District of California, is about Google's image search function in the form of thumbnail-size images as part of its search engine services. Google, relying on the Kelly decision, declared that its use of thumbnails is considered "fair use" under the Copyright Law. The preliminary ruling in the Perfect 10 case, said that the major factor differentiating Google's use of Perfect 10's images, from the 2004 case of Arriba Soft's use of Kelly's images, was that since early 2005, Perfect 10 licensed reduced-size images of its photographs to Fonestarz Media Ltd. of the United Kingdom. Fonestarz sells reduced-size copyrighted images for download and use on cell phones worldwide. The company sells about 6,000 thumbnails per month in Britain alone. The same thumbnails which Perfect 10 holds copyright registrations for, were being made available for downloading from Google's image search engine. The images are free from Google. You have to pay to obtain the images from Fonestarz. That's not the way photo-owners like to work. This is something the courts didn't recognize in their decision back in 2004. Leslie Kelly had not established that he made sales on thumbnails. The Court, likewise, made the presumption (like we all did) that there was no market for thumbnail-size images, and that included Kelly's. How is this going to turn out for stock photographers? On the one hand, searching and finding images within the Fair-Use doctrine of the Copyright Law has become imbedded in the web search culture. Can the search engines continue to offer this service, or The concept of this kind of micro payment is not new. Look at recording artists and composers, and radio broadcasting. Originally, radio stations only broadcast performers live. Later, recordings became widely used. Performers wanted to be paid, and many composers didn't want their music performed or played for free, but the stations wouldn't pay them. The composers who were members of ASCAP boycotted radio in 1944, and no music was broadcast for several months. Eventually the broadcasters agreed to pay "royalties" for each time a musician's recorded tune was broadcast. Thus began the system of royalty micropayment. Note: for former coverage by PSI on the Kelly case, see: www.photosource.com/photoaim/kelly.html www.photoaim.com/gen546.html www.photoaim.com/list/380d.html www.photosource.com/searchengine.html www.photoaim.com/list/396A.html Rohn Engh is director of PhotoSource International and publisher of PhotoStockNotes. Pine Lake Farm, 1910 35th Road, Osceola, WI 54020 USA. 1 800 624 0266 Fax: 1 715 248 7394. Web site: www.photosource.com/products
|