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Piracy The Courts

$1 Billion Getty Images Public Domain Photograph Dispute is Over (torrentfreak.com) 99

Earlier this year, photographer Carol Highsmith received a $120 settlement demand from Getty Images after she used one of her own public domain images on her website (which is she had donated to the Library of Congress and made available to the public to reproduce and display for free). Highsmith responded with a $1bn lawsuit but after a few short months, as TorrentFreak reports, the case is all over, with neither side a clear winner. From the report: To begin, on October 28, US District Court Judge Jed S. Rakoff dismissed each of Carol Highsmith's federal copyright claims. "Defendants Getty Images (US), Inc., License Compliance Services, Inc., Alamy, including that Inc., and Alamy Ltd. collectively moved to dismiss all claims of plaintiffs Carol Highsmith and This is America!, Inc. under the Digital Millenium Copyright Act,... the Lanham Act,... New York General Business Law,... and New York common law of unfair competition," the Judge wrote. "Upon consideration, the Court grants defendants' motions,â he added. With the federal claims gone, three state law claims were including that Getty charged licensing fees for images when it shouldn't have and collected settlements from alleged infringers when it had no right. However, these claims have now also been dismissed, along with the rest of the case. "It is hereby stipulated and agreed, by and among the parties, that this action shall be dismissed with prejudice pursuant to Rule 41(a)(l)(A)(ii) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, each party to bear its own costs and fees," the Judge wrote in his dismissal. Since the case was dismissed with prejudice, it is done and cannot be brought back to court.
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$1 Billion Getty Images Public Domain Photograph Dispute is Over

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  • Wrong person sued (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday November 25, 2016 @03:34PM (#53360979)

    Conclusion of confusing article:
    The original photographer, as she released them to the public domain, had no basis for any claims for activity around them afterwards. Rather, she was free to use those photos because they were, indeed, public domain.

    Perhaps a class action lawsuit is required by all of those who've paid for a "valid license" when no valid license was required, and Getty Images was no more than owner than anyone else.

    • Re:Wrong person sued (Score:5, Interesting)

      by msauve ( 701917 ) on Friday November 25, 2016 @03:49PM (#53361061)
      She should have ignored their demand and if they then started legal action, countersued for malicious/abusive prosecution.
      • by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Friday November 25, 2016 @04:59PM (#53361353)

        ... countersued for malicious/abusive prosecution.

        That would cost her way way way more than she would have a prayer of a chance of collecting. She could save time by just stuffing her life savings into the garbage disposal. The end result would be the same.

        • Sad but true

        • by msauve ( 701917 )
          Because a single suit would be more expensive than multiple federal and state ones? Or because winning in a malicious prosecution suit recovers legal costs, while a claim for damages (usually) results in only recovery of actual damages?</sarcasm>
          • Or because winning in a malicious prosecution suit recovers legal costs, while a claim for damages (usually) results in only recovery of actual damages

            She would be very unlikely to prevail in a malicious prosecution lawsuit. Otherwise she would have won the current case. She would lose the case, win nothing, and still be stuck with paying her own legal expenses. It is even possible that she could be ordered to pay Getty's expenses, if Getty's lawyers are good and thus know about Rule 68 [cornell.edu].

            • by msauve ( 701917 )
              "She would be very unlikely to prevail in a malicious prosecution lawsuit. Otherwise she would have won the current case"

              Legal fail. Two completely differenent issue, legally.

              "She would lose the case, win nothing, and still be stuck with paying her own legal expenses."

              And the current situation is different in exactly what way?
    • Perhaps a class action lawsuit is required by all of those who've paid for a "valid license" when no valid license was required

      They would likely lose. It is not illegal to sell licenses to public domain works, and it is not illegal to claim copyright. Go to Amazon, and type in the name of a public domain work, like say "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn", then click on "Look Inside", and then click on "copyright". What do you see?

    • Interesting problem. As the original photographer *and* releaser-of-rights, one would think that she had the BEST claim that they were RELEASED. Or does one have to say that she would be the best WITNESS that they were released, on someone else's behalf?
  • by K. S. Kyosuke ( 729550 ) on Friday November 25, 2016 @03:35PM (#53360985)
    Yes, she had donated which "is"? Ugh...
  • This keeps happening to a buddy of mine on teh Facebook. He puts up videos of him doing acoustic songs he wrote and created. Then a music recording company keeps reporting him for infringement. He's been banned a few times. More big companies bullying the little guy.
    • Except that's not what happened here, or even remotely like it. What happened here is that she placed her works into the public domain to be used in any manner the public liked... then got upset when she realized that this included commercial use by corporations. She didn't have a leg to stand on, and rightly lost. If she wanted to make her photos free to individuals only and not for commercial use, she should have released them under the correct license.
      • Re:Not surprised (Score:5, Informative)

        by Anonymous Coward on Friday November 25, 2016 @03:45PM (#53361033)

        No.

        What really pissed her off was getting a bill for using her own images on her own website.

        • Basically she has helped establish that the companies are copyright tolls, prone to a little fraud and extortion.
      • Re:Not surprised (Score:5, Informative)

        by pr0fessor ( 1940368 ) on Friday November 25, 2016 @03:48PM (#53361051)

        Except when that commercial use is to file law suites against people using those public domain images claiming copyright infringement and attempting to take down and/or receive payment based on copyrights that they don't posses.

    • My brother received a copy infringement notice on his bands domain from a company claiming to represent a third party that owned the copyright. They are signed to a small indie label and register copyright for everything before it's released to the public.

      He scanned the copyright confirmation and registration and sent it to his hosting provider.

    • So have him pop up his own website and post links to it on Facebook. Its what i did when FB started censoring my fair use movie clips i sometimes use in conversations as examples. No one owes you hosting.
    • It's even worse on youtube, I've had google simply start stealing adsense revenue for a video, and paying a recording company instead, without notice and the link to dispute was broken... Eve worse the music I was using in the background was youtubes own free provided music.
  • Standing. (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Macdude ( 23507 ) on Friday November 25, 2016 @03:39PM (#53361001)

    As she has released her photos into the public domain she has no standing to sue for damages. Getty Images, and anyone else, is free to use the images as they see fit, including selling them.

    But Getty shouldn't be getting away scott free, as the images are in the public domain they have no standing to sue anyone for using the images without a license.

    This is not an area the legal system is setup to handle very well.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Pretty sure the legal system just said it is okay to send out extortion letters for public domain images.

      • by vux984 ( 928602 )

        Pretty sure the legal system just said it is okay to send out extortion letters for public domain images.

        In precisely the same way that if you camp on my cousins front yard and I sue you for the tort of tresspass; the courts will dismiss the case because I don't have standing.

        The courts aren't saying you can can camp on my cousins front yard. they are just saying *I* can't sue them for it. My cousin, on the other hand...

        Or perhaps if it rises to the level of criminal trespass the police and state can prosecute directly.

        But in any case, *I* can't bring a lawsuit over it.

        In this particular case, I'd suggest tha

        • Wouldn't the courts be the agent of the public as well?
    • But Getty shouldn't be getting away scott free, as the images are in the public domain they have no standing to sue anyone for using the images without a license.

      This is not an area the legal system is setup to handle very well.

      Perhaps Trump will Make America Great Again. I'm sure our founding fathers just weren't smart enough to figure out a legal situation like this. Trump can complete their divine plan.

    • by guruevi ( 827432 )

      They are in the public domain, you can in fact threaten to sue people when they use them or collect royalty payments for them. Threatening to sue or collecting owed debts in a commercial setting is entirely legal and possible because the company does not enjoy the same protections a consumer has.

      In fact, a debtor can sell your personal debt to a commercial collection agency if you ever start a business and they can continue harassing you without limits because a commercial debt does not have the same protec

      • by gfxguy ( 98788 )

        It's a lot more tricky than that, and I think people should refrain from following the big-company-bad, artist-good mantra when we don't know all the details. For example, if I create a painting and "donate" it to the public domain, if someone takes a picture of it they absolutely have a right to license the use of that picture of it. You're free to go take your own picture of the painting, or pay for someone else's picture of it... or even possibly get it for free from somewhere else.

        In this case, while

        • if someone takes a picture of it they absolutely have a right to license the use of that picture of it. You're free to go take your own picture of the painting, or pay for someone else's picture of it... or even possibly get it for free from somewhere else.

          You've already made this point several times elsewhere (specifically, four times in this thread AFAICT) and as far as I'm aware, you're mistaken.

          Under US jurisdiction (but not necessarily elsewhere), if your photograph- or a digital scan- is a purely mechanical reproduction with no creative input, you can't claim copyright on it [slashdot.org] and I'm quite entitled to use it without paying you.

          (I guess if you can con someone into agreeing to pay your "license" fee, there's not necessarily anything illegal about that,

          • by gfxguy ( 98788 )
            Perhaps Getty argued they had creative input. Perhaps they not only digitized it, but color corrected or cleaned it up. Again, as I've also stated several times, we don't know enough information to pass judgment.
            • Perhaps Getty argued they had creative input. Perhaps they not only digitized it, but color corrected or cleaned it up. Again, as I've also stated several times, we don't know enough information to pass judgment.

              It was *you* who originally raised this as (a purely hypothetical basis for) a claim on Getty's part! I merely responded explaining why I didn't believe it would be valid.

              Similarly, in response to your speculative example that they might have applied colour correction and cleaning up, these would probably fail for similar reasons, i.e. non-creative input below the threshold of originality under US law.

              But as you've stated several times, we don't have enough information, so this *is* all just speculation

    • by gfxguy ( 98788 )
      IANAL but I think there's more to this story that we're not hearing; there's a lot of things we simply don't know and I think it looks foolish to draw conclusions about it without knowing the details. She released the images to the public domain in 1988. How many photographers were using digital cameras in 1988? Let's say none, since the first commercially available digital camera didn't come out until 1989. Anyway, that means Getty probably scanned in and cataloged all of those thousands of images she
      • Regarding the *possibility* that Getty might have scanned her images and she might have used those copies- that's irrelevant for reasons I already posted [slashdot.org] in response to one of the other three posts where you made this point.

        Her use of Getty's database services may be a separate issue, but unless they're they've actually alleged in court as part of their case that she did that (and agreed to their terms), it's irrelevant speculation.
    • I don't agree that she should have no standing, just no more standing than any other citizen. As I understand it that's the difference between res publicae and res communes. Res communes is for the enjoyment of all. Res publicae is owned by all the citizens. The image is property of the public. Any citizen should have standing when a private entity claims ownership of the public's property.
  • take public domain photos, send out extortion letters to anyone using the same photos and in those letters they say they are the copyright holder or represent copy right holders and you must pay up and they off scott free? WTF?

  • by hipp5 ( 1635263 ) on Friday November 25, 2016 @03:45PM (#53361029)

    "Neither Side a Clear Winner"

    From the summary it appears as if yes, there certainly was a clear winner: Getty Images. I guess you could argue that they didn't get the $120 they demanded from Highsmith, but they've managed to get all of the claims against them dismissed.

    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward

      And the judge also sealed the pre-trial discovery of information under a gag order... which I figure would protect Getty WAY more than the plaintiff Ms. Highsmith.

      Also, the judge won't release his reasoning until later.

      This smells to me....

  • by laughingskeptic ( 1004414 ) on Friday November 25, 2016 @04:29PM (#53361249)
    Hopefully defense attorneys will use this effectively going forward. Getty won't be able to claim anything and should have to prove everything. Signed document ... no good, we want to depose the signers, etc. That employee doesn't work for you anymore? ... too bad. Normally a judge would not considered these requests reasonable, but they are reasonable in the face of a corporation that has knowingly misrepresented their ownership of copyrights in court.
  • ... a-with-a-hat, he added. C-with-a-little-tail, I responded.

  • There's an excellent discussion here [extortionletterinfo.com] about the legal meaning of Highsmith's Instrument of Gift [documentcloud.org].

    There's a number of contradictory clauses in it, maybe three possible interpretations of what she intended, but one of them is indeed "full public domain" as apparently the court decided.

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • like they sent to the photographer, requesting $200?

  • by Qbertino ( 265505 ) <moiraNO@SPAMmodparlor.com> on Friday November 25, 2016 @09:24PM (#53362629)

    This is why FOSS / Creative Commons is better than public domain.
    Had she released her images under a appropriate CC license, she could've sued Getty into next wednesday as she attempted.
    With the images only being public domain, none of her rights were infringed expect for the unjustified bill.

    I feel sorry for her. We should collect some donations.
    This is one of the reasons I hate big-ass foundries, be it font or images. And the same reason I love CC and the artists creating things for a reasonable price.

    • by gfxguy ( 98788 )
      Perhaps. Did CC even exist back then? I guess not, since it was formed over a decade after she released her photos. But for the record, let's say someone publishes a hard copy of CC'ed short stories. Are they not allowed to charge for it? For some reason it doesn't surprise people that companies are selling GNU licensed software (although you can largely get the same stuff for free) because they made a nice package out of it.
      • I'm pretty sure they can charge for their packaging and marketing of the stories, i.e. yes, they can charge for it.

        What they can't do is create and sell their product, then look up instances of people also publishing those stories and charge them licensing fees.

        That is what Getty did here, they just happened to do it to the original author, so she was absolutely certain they had no right to charge her. Her mistake was in thinking she still had any right to sue them for misrepresenting a copyright claim on h

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