P51Mstg wrote:
JDK is WRONG (at least in the United States) that "copyright rests with the person or organisation that commissioned the photo, NOT the photographer. " The photographer has the copyright unless it is "work for hire". Hence when you have a photog take pics of the HS Senior, baby or wedding, THEY OWN THE COPYRIGHT TO THE PIC. You can't scan it or take it to WalMart to have more pics printed.
At least quote me correctly, as I'm neither 'wrong' not incorrect. I actually said (emphasis added):
Quote:
7. In the case of photos until a recent change, in certain laws, copyright rests with the person or organisation that commissioned the photo, NOT the photographer.
I'd expect better from a lawyer, but then, I'd not paid for the advice.

And if your quote refers to a specific US law, please say so, don't imply it's what I said or meant, neither of which is true.

If you read what I
actually said, you've shown that it is correct in US law,
in certain cases.
For the record, I was
not referring to US law, nor current law, and, yes, relating to 'work for hire' as mentioned. (As to US law, it's rarely of my direct concern.) There are numerous wrinkles depending on offer of work for hire, commissioned and employees duties etc. Again, for clarity, this may or may not relate to US law; it certainly does in certain cases in English (Scottish law is different again) and Australian law, which I do need to understand.
Careless reference to 'Government' or 'GOVT' on a website with an international readership is poor, and not helpful. Contextually, it's clear this refers to the US Government, and that's true. This is not the case for
governments generally, as might be assumed, nor to the applicability of US law in an international context. Hence my point 5, an assumption both active and passive by many readers.
I'm sure Mark and I have better things to do that argue the details of the points, and the original question has been well answered.
The image quality/size issue is another one again. Theft of online images is either for print media, where the high-resolution issue already discussed is relevant, or more common now, the internet. Given the exponential growth of the internet, more and more photos are lifted from one site and presented without proper attribution or agreement on another site. In this case, what's good enough on one page will be good enough on another website. Then it makes sense to have marked or watermarked the image then you have forced the thief / borrower to either leave the image as unuseable, or
to actively modify or re-crop the photo. By forcing them to do this, when endeavouring to bring a case, you have strengthened your position by
showing they have actively removed a copyright or attribution notice, as against a defence of ignorance. That's all subject to the other points of whose law applies, and where etc., of course.
Cheers,