What should I do about this, I would at least like credit for it. I know
this magazine pays big bucks too.
Can a professional shed some light on this situation.
Thanks...
We had a similar situation when I was working on PhotoPro magazine several
years ago. We ran a story about a guy and used several of his photos. Next
thing we knew we had an angry letter from a big name pro. Turns out this guy
was an assistant on some shoots and was shooting over the pro's shoulder.
There was no way for us to know this ahead of time.
So, what did we do? We ran an apology to the pro in the next issue, and
credited him for the photos, because even though the guy we wrote about really
took the photos he sent us, they were not his images.
In your case, if your partner won't make good on things, I advise you to
contact the editors of the magazine and ask for a correction and proper
credit. They will probably do this.
As for money, you will have to go after your partner for this. Assuming he
was paid for the images, then he owes you for that one. But you may be
surprised at the amount. Few magazines pay "big bucks" for photos these
days.
Bob Shell
In article <sparks-2007...@slc244h.modem.xmission.com>,
-----== Posted via Deja News, The Leader in Internet Discussion ==-----
http://www.dejanews.com/rg_mkgrp.xp Create Your Own Free Member Forum
>So, what did we do? We ran an apology to the pro in the next issue, and
>credited him for the photos, because even though the guy we wrote about
really
>took the photos he sent us, they were not his images.
If his assistant took the photos, they belong to his assistant, unless the
assistant was taking photos as work for hire.
--
Anthony
Anthony wrote:
Last I heard, copyright goes to the person who created the images.
I would think in that case, that the images did belong to the assistant. The
Pro should have told him no shooting was alowed. But since he failed to llok
out for his own interests, tough beans. I don't think the assistant did
anything wrong.
I've worked as an assistant and been ripped off by "pros" so I feel for both
sides.
Keith
--
http://www.spiritone.com/~kclark/
Custom Screensavers
&
Professional Nature Photography
>> If his assistant took the photos, they belong to his assistant, unless the
>> assistant was taking photos as work for hire.
>Last I heard, copyright goes to the person who created the images.
>I would think in that case, that the images did belong to the assistant. The
>Pro should have told him no shooting was alowed. But since he failed to llok
>out for his own interests, tough beans. I don't think the assistant did
>anything wrong.
It's a tough call. It seems fair to assume the assistant was being
paid for his time. Therefore, any work he produces during that time I
would think should be the property of the person paying him.
Example - I work for software company "A", and I own software company
"B". From 8:00am to 4:00pm, I'm being paid by "A" to work for them,
and anything I create during that time belongs to "A".
After hours, though, what I do with my time is no one at "A"'s
business, and my work for "B" is my own.
Seems to me that both the photog and the assistant made mistakes. The
assistant (based on the sketchy information) was shooting his own
pictures on "company time", and the photog let him get away with it or
didn't make his expectations clear up front.
Beyond that, there's an intellectual property question. Presumably,
the photog paid for the setup for the shoot (props, models, travel,
lights, etc). Also, he presumably designed the shot, be it an
arrangement of models and props, or a landscape at a specific location
and a specific time.
By taking pictures, the assistant quite possibly did little more than
push a button, taking advantage of the work and knowledge of his
employer.
Me, I'm kind of inclined to side with the employer on this one.
There's nothing wrong with the assistant learning all he can while on
the job, but he's still very much on the job, and owes his employer
first.
-->If he is IN the picture, then he can't claim he took it, unless he claims he
-->used the self timer or remote release. Have you contacted him and asked him
-->why he didn't give you credit?
-->
Yes he's in the photo...he's also away on a month long trip...more below
-->In your case, if your partner won't make good on things, I advise you to
-->contact the editors of the magazine and ask for a correction and proper
-->credit. They will probably do this.
talked to them today and they were very apologetic and wanted to get to
the bottom of this, again he's gone for a while so it won't happen soon.
They are also going to consider paying me for the photo (even though
they've paid him)
It all will come down to his honesty and frankly I'm not very encouraged
by my past dealings with him.
I've definately learned a few lessons.
Depends on the local laws and company policies; many high-tech
companies require an explicit Intellectual Property agreement as a
condition of employment, that on paper may give them ownership of a
novel you write on your own computer at home, outside of business
hours. They usually aren't enforced for obvious cases, but they make
you sign, just in case there's a non-obvious case they haven't thought
of yet.
-j
A couple of times photos taken at my workshops have ended up in print. I
hired the model, I posed her, I set up the background and props, and I set up
the lighting. The "photographer" only had to stand in the right place and
click the shutter. So is it his photo? Hardly.
It is not uncommon for big time professionals to have an assistant actually
click the shutter while they are occupied in fine tuning a pose or doing
something else on the set. There is never any question as to whose photo it
is.
This whole subject can be sticky. I hope it works out well for you.
Bob
In article <sparks-2107...@slc103h.modem.xmission.com>,
spa...@campfour.win.net (Rich and Dr. Jules) wrote:
-----== Posted via Deja News, The Leader in Internet Discussion ==-----
Matt Kaarma wrote:
--
http://www.acadiacom.net/jsheldon/thejuke/index.html
http://www.acadiacom.net/jsheldon/index.html
>Depends on the local laws and company policies; many high-tech
>companies require an explicit Intellectual Property agreement as a
>condition of employment, that on paper may give them ownership of a
>novel you write on your own computer at home, outside of business
>hours.
I've never seen anything like that. What the agreements really say, in
practice, are that anything you create with company resources belongs to the
company (which would arguably be the case anyway), and that anything that
you create on your own time _that relates to the company's business_ must be
brought to the company's attention, so they can have first crack at buying
it.
>They usually aren't enforced for obvious cases ...
In some jurisdictions, agreements such as you describe would be
unenforceable and contrary to law. Some jurisdictions do not allow you to
sign away all your rights to everything you produce in advance
(fortunately).
I'm not a lawyer; this isn't legal advice.
--
Anthony
>I've never seen anything like that.
I have. In my late teens, I worked as a factory grunt. Even in that
unglamorous position they required that I sign an agreement that gave
them ownership of any inventions (or similar things) I made while I
was employed there. The language indicated that it didn't matter if I
did it off the clock with my own resources - they would still own it.
>What the agreements really say, in
>practice, are that anything you create with company resources belongs to the
>company (which would arguably be the case anyway),
And this would seem perfectly fair.
One of the ones I've personally seen said something to the effect of
"while the law only gives us the right to your stuff if it was done on
our time or our equipment, by signing this you agree to allow us to
review any IP you produce, just in case".
-j
Bob
In article <#VvxTnZt9GA.221@upnetnews03>,
"Anthony" <mxsm...@hotmail.com> wrote:
> J Greely wrote in message ...
>
> >Depends on the local laws and company policies; many high-tech
> >companies require an explicit Intellectual Property agreement as a
> >condition of employment, that on paper may give them ownership of a
> >novel you write on your own computer at home, outside of business
> >hours.
>
> I've never seen anything like that. What the agreements really say, in
> practice, are that anything you create with company resources belongs to the
> company (which would arguably be the case anyway), and that anything that
> you create on your own time _that relates to the company's business_ must be
> brought to the company's attention, so they can have first crack at buying
> it.
>
> >They usually aren't enforced for obvious cases ...
>
> In some jurisdictions, agreements such as you describe would be
> unenforceable and contrary to law. Some jurisdictions do not allow you to
> sign away all your rights to everything you produce in advance
> (fortunately).
>
> I'm not a lawyer; this isn't legal advice.
>
> --
> Anthony
>
>
-----== Posted via Deja News, The Leader in Internet Discussion ==-----
>>It is not uncommon for big time professionals to have an assistant actually
>>click the shutter
>Ok, maybe I'm a purist here, and I know that's how some of the
>"big time pros" do it, but if someone else takes a picture of a scene
>I set up, THEY are the photographer of a scene I concieved. When it
>comes to the point that I can't shoot my own photos, I guess I'll find
>a new hobby.
Compare to the movie industry. It's rare that the directory operates
the camera - there's almost always a technician for that job, working
under instructions from the director.
i'm not an attorney, but i think if i walk onto a david lachappelle set
and he says "could you push that shutter" it's still his photo. after all,
taking a photo is often considerably more than pushing the button. i'd go
for whoever setup the shot...... that's just me though.
kc
>Compare to the movie industry. It's rare that the directory operates
>the camera - there's almost always a technician for that job, working
>under instructions from the director.
I believe that the camera operators get a share of the royalties, though
(?).
--
Anthony
In a word, bullshit!
Copyright is automatic and begins when you click the shutter. If a lab ever
did what you suggest, and I doubt that any lab would, you could own the lab.
Bob
If anyone's interested...check out the august issue (shark on cover) of
Outside magazine under "dispatches"...2 page photo.
thanks to all who replied...
I know there are plenty who will debate this, but I suggest you ask pros in
the biz who have actual experience in both work for hire and copyright
licensing of widely published work. Alot of things go on in minor
productions that are not exactly "kosher" that would create serious probs
for widely published/marketed ones.
Here is a question; could the camera/film owner have destroyed the whole
roll of film without liability, even if the poster told him verbally, I am
being paid xxx to take photos of this setup? I think so, unless he agreed
explicitly to provide the equipment and film previously, they are his
property, regardless of what is on them. But he doesn't necessarily have
the rights to sell their contents because the phyical medium is his
property.
I think everyone agrees that the ethical thing to do would be to share the
profits without a lot of red tape. This would be *if* the guy who sold the
image really believed he did not take the shot himself. I was never clear
on whether this was a project shoot or just building stock. Did they know
there was a potential buyer for the work. If so, why was there no
clarification made before the shoot as to who owned the images?
** Copyright laws have changed too much to make any assumptions based on
ethics or personal beliefs.
This is just another case to illustrate that we really should plan for
ownership issues before the fact, especially if there are other parties
involved in the creation of the work**
#1 - Use your own film and your own/or rented camera, unless you want to
deal with these issues again. Without some prior agreement, whoever owns
the film/camera is the one who is going to leave the shoot with it.
Without a lot of documentation, you will have one huge job even proving
that you released the shutter, assuming that would be enough to claim
ownership.
According to an old photo book of mine, in the UK, copyright of a picture
belongs to whoever owned the film at the time the picture was taken.
Whether that's still true today, or in other countries, I don't know -
but it does sound reasonably sensible for common cases - holiday pictures
or work-for-hire - and simpler to verify.
--
_|_ Jerry Cullingford jerry.cu...@ffei.co.uk (Work)
/ | Fujifilm Electronic Imaging j...@selune.demon.co.uk (Home)
\_|_ Hemel Hempstead, UK PGP key at www.selune.demon.co.uk
\__/ (Speaking only for myself and not the company unless otherwise stated)
this is *absolutely* wrong. You're copyright is created upon creation
of the image (ie snapping the shutter). You do not have to do anything
else. You can register this copyright which further protects you/your
image but this is not required to be minimally protected.
If they used your image without your permission (absolutely make
sure it is yours....I've seen one shot so close to mine that it would
take you 2 good looks to notice....really strange) then you have a couple
of choices. If it is a small infringement like just a sample picture
in their store, then you might want to just charge them say triple
what you'd normally charge. Just send them a bill and a small explanation.
If they don't go for it, then go to the 2nd option. Pay a lawyer a small
fee to write a nasty letter demanding payment plus lawyers fees. Copyright
(federal) law clearly states that all legal fees are paid by the defendent
if they lose whcih is just about always since the questions is "Did you
use the photo without permission?"
>> I don't know if they still use it, but National Geographic used to have a
>> contract for their staff photographers which specified that EVERY photo they
>> took, whether on company time or off, belonged to National Geographic.
that woudl really surprise me since the photographers would then have to
solely make their money through NG. The other thing is that NG probably
has very few staff photog's and does everything freelance or on assignment
which is very different than staff.
Gerald Sylvester
When you are paying that individual to teach you how to set up
the shots?
Actually, you will find that in lack of evidence otherwise
(such as a written contract)
that the person pushing the button owns the copyright.
If who pushed the button is indeterminatable, then who possesses
the original film would probably be found to be the owner.
By your thinking, the stylist would be the owner. But, I think
that one could show that the instant that the picture is taken
has a high degree of influence on the artistic merit of the
photograph in question. At least HCB would have said so.
In short if you took Mr Shell's workshop, a court would probably
find that you owned the copyright to the photos that you took,
unless you had signed an agreement otherwise prior to paying for
the workshop.
Shooting over the shoulder of any pro who knows is business is
going to violate clauses in his contract, and he will be able to
hold his client liable.
In the film situation someone had mentioned earlier in this thread,
you can bet that the cinematographers had signed work for hire
contracts. However, the entertainment film industry in the US is
almost religious about giving credits.
Copyright law used to be very hard to figure out. The current
law, however, is very clear. In absence of proof otherwise, the
person who took the photograph is the copyright owner.
In the original poster's case going by what he has said it is
going to be hard to prove that he, in fact, took the photograph
in question.
Sorry to Bob,
But unless the photographers sign a release giving ALL the photographic
rights to the person who sets up a photo,such as the person who
organizes the workshop, the Rights will always belong to the
photographer. Yes, Bob hired the models, set up the lighting, props,
etc., but he charged the photographers money to attend his workshop.
Thus, each photographer bought and paid for ALL RIGHTS and all
photographs belong to the individual photographer to do as they please,
such as publishing them in magazines.
In the commercial world, all photographs taken always belongs to the
photographer unless there is a written contract stating otherwise. This
is to prevent the arguement such as, "the director set up the shot so we
don't have to pay the photographer his full fee." It doesn't matter who
came up with the idea, who set up the shot, who set up the lighting,
etc., it's who took the photograph. All professional photographers know
this and enforce it when they hire out to do a job.
Working for a magazine is different and all professional photographers
work out a contract IN ADVANCE, as to who owns what "rights" to the
photographs. I'm not aware of any copyright problems in todays
magazines.
In the future, if you know of a local photo lab or an office copy center
that stole your photographs, you can file suit against them for
copyright violations. IT IS A VERY LARGE PENALTY, if they are found to
have violated COPYRIGHT LAWS. As long as you are in possesion of the
film or negatives and you have not signed away the rights to your
photographs, the copyrights will always belong to the photographer. So,
enforce your rights if someone uses your photographs.
R Sanchez
A lawsuit, yes. But, would it be _worthwhile_ to even file one?
Isn't there some limit on what kinds of damages one can collect if the
shot is unregistered (which in such a case is true). I thought the limit was
only what income was lost, which would amount to how much they got paid for the
shot and any profits from it.
I can't imagine that would ammount to much.. perhaps not even the cost
of filing the lawsuit.
--
Pat White (work: patbob...@sequent.com, (503) 578-3463)
Internet==Net of 1000 lies. (adapted from Verner Vinge's
_A Fire Upon The Deep_)
Lets use your last example, since I have experience in this
area. The original work, the paintings are the artist's property
by common law and copyright law. To use reproductions of them
I need a property release from the artist. The photographs
(slides) are my property by copyright. For the artist to use
the slides she needs an assignment of copyright from me, as I
would to use the paintings for any commercial purpose. I could
use the slides for my portfolio or to illustrate an article about
the author without violating her copyright. "I" would get a
release for such use as a courtesy and for ethical reasons in
such a case.
You seem to be confused about the differences between copyright
an property rights. Your court case above may be correct, or it
may have been decided under the old copyright law which was very
confusing. And, please note, photos taken prior to the new law going
into effect are covered under the old law. One of the problems
with the old law was that much of it was determined by various
contradictory court decisions. Results depended more on how
good your lawyer was than what the law said.
>In <35BBCD...@frontiernet.net> Michael <mmi...@frontiernet.net> writes:
>>hw...@my-dejanews.com wrote:
>>> IWhether you realise it or not,when you have film developed at a local store
>>> they make copies of the picture if is exceptional,and sell them to stock
>>> photo companies. if your photos are'nt copy righted they are up for grabs,and
>>>...
>>You are wrong, copyright belongs to the photographer. If a lab is
>>selling customer photos they are looking for a law suit against them.
>
> A lawsuit, yes. But, would it be _worthwhile_ to even file one?
>
> Isn't there some limit on what kinds of damages one can collect if the
>shot is unregistered (which in such a case is true). I thought the limit was
>only what income was lost, which would amount to how much they got paid for the
>shot and any profits from it.
> I can't imagine that would ammount to much.. perhaps not even the cost
>of filing the lawsuit.
I recently had the same experience but not form someone selling my
work but a model posting them on a website without my permission. My
attorney told me that even though she bought the images from me, it
did not give her the right to post them on the internet without my
permission. Copyright remains with the photographer from the time you
create the image until 50 years from your death, if your estate does
ot re-new the copyright. While it is good to file for an official
copyright, you have three years from the time of the copyright
infringement to do so. We did not have to go to court because we
figured the model and the website owner wouldn't be able to pay when
we won. We did get the images removed and the website owner dropped by
his server. Our lawsuit would have involved the server as well since
we informed them of the infraction and at first they didn't do
anything about it. If a lab is selling your work, you can sue and you
WILL win. Just passing on a little experience I had.
I'm relatively newbie in the slide photography, having a growing
collection of shots. :)
My question: what is the best way to store/preserve slide
pictures (mounted/unmounted) ?
Thank you!
Istvan
--
\~"~/
(o o)
_________oO0_(~)_0Oo____________
http://www.kom.auc.dk/~istvan
__________________________
"There is nothing in the world
that's worth giving up
that you've already achieved"
Ashley Rice
_________ooO_____Ooo____________
( )_/ \_( )
O)/ \(O
Hi,
some hints, which might be helpful:
Store the slides as dry and cool as possible.
For mounted slides:
If you use glasses, clean them before mounting.
Do not use mounts, which are airtight.
In my experience GePe mounts are quite save.
I have never experienced any problems with fungus
or something similar within the last 20 years with
this type of mounts.
Just a few thoughts
Harald
--
Dr. Ing. Harald Finster ave Verkehrs- und Informationstechnik GmbH
Store them in a cool, dark, place, ideally with about 20%-30% relative
humidity. Unprojected Kodachrome will last much better than any other slide
film, and much better than any color negatives or ordinary color prints. If
stored in the dark, the first barely visible color changes should take about
100 years to manifest themselves.
Kodachrome fades quite badly when projected, so if you expect to project a
particular image very much, make a duplicate on Ektachrome or Fujichrome and
project that. 40 years later, when the duplicate has faded away, make another
duplicate for projection.
--Chris mu...@selway.umt.edu
> Thank you!
>
> Istvan
>
> --
> \~"~/
> (o o)
> _________oO0_(~)_0Oo____________
> http://www.kom.auc.dk/~istvan
> __________________________
> "There is nothing in the world
> that's worth giving up
> that you've already achieved"
> Ashley Rice
> _________ooO_____Ooo____________
> ( )_/ \_( )
> O)/ \(O
>
>
-----== Posted via Deja News, The Leader in Internet Discussion ==-----
>The language indicated that it didn't matter if I
>did it off the clock with my own resources - they would still own it.
That would certainly be a challenge to enforce.
>And this would seem perfectly fair.
I agree. Signing everything you do away in advance is a bit extreme,
though, and I speculate that it is unenforceable in some jurisdictions.
--
Anthony
Being my first photo 'exhibition' I appreciate all the suggestions.
Please feel free to comment!
Thank you!
http://www.kom.auc.dk/~istvan/photos.html
Istvan Kovacs
What I was affraid of it happened: a lots of JavaScript errors on my photo
page, though from my network (Unix and win95) it works.
Thanks for all of you who tried visiting my photo page! I will take it off
line and try to fix the bugs. Unfortunately the only way to really test it
is to ask you (people with different browsers and OS) to visit it. Thank
you again!
Hope I'll be back soon,
Istvan Kovacs
Anthony wrote in message <6qphl0$s...@news.microsoft.com>...
On Tue, 11 Aug 1998, Istvan Zsolt Kovacs wrote:>
>
> Being my first photo 'exhibition' I appreciate all the suggestions.
> Please feel free to comment!
> Thank you!
http://www.cpk.auc.dk/~istvan/photos.html
Istvan Kovacs
--
\~"~/
(o o)
_________oO0_(~)_0Oo____________
--
\~"~/
(o o)
_________oO0_(~)_0Oo____________
On Tue, 01 Sep 1998 14:51:51 GMT, Istvan Zsolt Kovacs
<ist...@kom.auc.dk> wrote:
>..... My photo pages are on-line again:) Please take a look,
>
> http://www.cpk.auc.dk/~istvan/photos.html
>
> Istvan Kovacs
--
Larry
Website: The Anything Box at
http://www.surfnetusa.com/ldart
Photography, short stories, humor
>
> Hi!
> My photo pages are on-line again:) Please take a look,
> and feel free to comment!
> Thank you!
>
>
> http://www.cpk.auc.dk/~istvan/photos.html
This page seems to generate a multitude of JavaScript errors (Netscape 4.04).
Why do you need JavaScript to display your photos?
Tony Karp, TLC Systems Corp tk...@tlc-systems.com
Visit our web sites:
Techno-Impressionist Museum: http://www.techno-impressionist.com
TLC Systems: http://www.tlc-systems.com
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Naomi
Tony Karp wrote in message <35f53ad2...@enews.newsguy.com>...