Use of pictures taken from social media constitutes a copyright infringement
In what has been hailed by the photography industry as a “landmark decision”, District Judge Alison Nathan, sitting in the US District Court of New York, has held that it is an infringement of copyright to use someone else’s photos which have been posted on Twitter.
Photojournalist Daniel Morel took several photographs of the earthquake which shook Haiti in 2010 which he posted to Twitter, saying that they were for sale. Note that at the time Twitter’s Terms of Service made it clear that users retained copyright in their content, and indeed the Terms of Service today say: “You retain your rights to any Content you submit, post or display on or through the Services” (though you do grant Twitter a worldwide, royalty-free, non-exclusive licence to that content).
Morel’s photographs were subsequently copied by an individual living in the Dominican Republic, who then sold them to Agence France-Presse (AFP), who then shared them with Getty images. David Morel received no attribution or remuneration for the subsequent use by many media organisations worldwide.
AFP argued that either its conduct must have been licensed or “the uncountable number of daily ‘re-tweets’ on Twitter and in the media where Twitter/TwitPic posts are copied, reprinted, quoted, and rebroadcast by third parties, all could constitute copyright infringements.” The District Court explained however that “a license for one use does not equate to a license for all uses”.
The US District Court reasonably held that “Construing the Twitter TOS to provide an unrestrained, third-party license to remove content from Twitter and commercially license that content would be a gross expansion of the terms of the Twitter TOS.” Therefore AFP and the other media organisations that had used Morel’s photographs without permission were liable for copyright infringement and for damages.
Getty argued that it was a service provider and that it should therefore be able to rely on the safe harbor defence provided for in the DCMA. The judge dismissed this argument.
Morel claimed millions of dollars of statutory damages on the basis that each illegal reproduction of his photographs by all of Getty’s and AFP’s members was an individual infringement. The US District Court however held that AFP was liable only once for each alleged “violative act” rather than for every copy of Morel’s photos, limiting Morel’s damages to between US$ 20,000 and 200,000.
Source: The 1709 Blog