Former Penthouse Lawyer On Thumbnails 19
FullyIonized writes: "Gigalaw.com has an interesting article
on the legality of using thumbnail images written by an attorney for Penthouse magazine, who "had to be familiar with the entire Penthouse-catalog of photos and models, and ... proactively surfed the Net in search of kidnapped images." He summarizes an interesting case, and then argues that pr0n thumbnails (among others) are different from other thumbnails."
Do we really wannt to know abou this thumbnails? (Score:1)
Why don't they... (Score:2, Funny)
...recruit for this job at my school? I know I'm qualified!
Re:Why don't they... (Score:2)
"familiar" (Score:3, Funny)
Funny over exageration. (Score:3, Informative)
Show me one "multi-million" dollar porn pay site today (never mind in the early-to-mid 90's). From what I hear, due to the glut of porn out there, it doesn't pay that much. Even Playboy's own site is losing money.
Re:Funny over exageration. (Score:1)
Re:Funny over exageration. (Score:2, Informative)
Multi-Million Dollar Websites (Score:1)
http://www.cybererotica.com
http://www.karasxx
http://www.ifriends.com
http://www.gammae.com
http://www.adultrevenues
http://www.sexaddicted.com
http://www
http://www.pornholio.com
Like music and movies... (Score:2)
I fully support the scan scene. They provide a service that none of the big publishers do: indexed, full catalogs of the magazines (well, at least the pics, for now). I would pony up probably $100-$200 for a DVD of every issue of Playboy, complete with pics, ads, and articles. I think PDFs would be awesome, but an HTML layout would be nice, too. I'm sure a lot of the porn fanboys would agree.
Actually, I wish the ebook scene (the ones who scan novels and post as decent PDFs or HTML collections on P2P) would do this for magazines of all sorts.
My point (a little remote, I admit) is that these companies shouldn't go after people who scan/post pics. Yeah, maybe the ones making money, but not the little guys. After all, they actually purchase the materials to scan. And I would bet a large market for these scans are -- you guessed it -- under-aged boys, so there is no legit market for them anyway.
The lawyer does raise the decent point that thubnails may (maybe) satisfy the market need for the product, thus hurting sales of the real product. I have to wonder... if there was absolutely no way to get nudies online without paying, would the online porn industry really do any better? I personally tend to think it would not.
Re:Like music and movies... (Score:2)
Re:Like music and movies... (Score:1)
Here's a thread about it from an adult forum:
http://bbs.adultwebmasterinfo.com/ubb/ult
Good piece. (Score:2)
I think he does take a little liberty with the decision. He takes the position that providing an in-line link is infringment. I disagree, the court ruled that a framed, in-line image is infringment. The difference is that framing the image is an affirmative act in giving the impression that the image is part of the site belonging to the thumbnailer, not the site of the copyright holder. Just putting a link to the image without framing may give the impression, but is not an affirmative act to give the impression.
Thumbnail etiquette (Score:2, Informative)
I think that image indexing services like Google, or any other web content creator, would not be violating any sort of copyright laws if they simply referenced the original images and let the browsers scale them to thumbnail size. I suspect they do not do this because browsers' resampling algorithms suck and images take loads of time to download; therefore, users would be dissatisfied with search results pages loading times.
I think that works placed on public http servers are inherently permissibly copyable: since the only way people can look at them is to obtain a copy in the first place, the content creator meant for the work to be copied in the first place.
Re:Thumbnail etiquette (Score:1)
An apropòs example [google.com].
Thumbnails needed (Score:1)
Re:Thumbnails needed (Score:1)