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The legal issues of photography
These are great things to know and understand about photography
and the use of your image. These things apply when going to
any photographer. But since I am not a lawer, dont take what
is here to be official legal advice.
When photograph is created, it is copyrighted to the photographer.
The photographer or his agent has the exclusive right to exploit
the copyright in each image. That right is for the life of
the photographer plus 70 years. Any unauthorized use constitutes
an infringement. Permission to use a copyrighted photograph
for any purpose whatsoever must be obtained in advance in
writing to avoid possible violation of the federal law on
copyright. For example if someone takes a photo of you and
you wish put it in a magazine- you must get approval from
the photographer first. They have the legal right to say no
or the photographer may ask for addtional payment for use
of that coyprighted photo or just ask for photo credit. (As
a photographer, I would say only say no in the case that it
is not presenting Oriental dance in a positive, and uplifting
light)
Model release is important to the photographer if the photos
have recognizable people in them. A person's likeness can
not be used for the purposes of selling a product or service
without their permission to do so (ie sign a model release).
This is a fundamental, constitutional "right of privacy",
and there are similar laws throughout the world.
The very first thing you must understand is the difference
between an "editorial" use of a picture and a "commercial
use" of a picture. Simplistically stated, if a magazine or
newspaper uses a picture to illustrate an article they are
doing on, say, the environment, that is an "editorial" usage
of the photo: The picture is being used to illustrate the
editorial content of the article. (It varies widely, when,
in fact, it's "okay" to use a picture of a person for "editorial
content", even without their permission, and when it's not.)
If, in that same magazine or newspaper, the same photo is
used in an advertisement for a detergent, with the idea of
promoting sales of that detergent product, that is a commercial
use of that picture.
The legal requirements associated with the use of a model
in those two different ways are vastly different. In the latter
case, you are using a person's likeness to promote a product
or service, meaning that you are using the image for "commercial
purposes", and the photographer must have the person's permission
to do so in the form of a valid "model release".
There are certain circumstances where you cannot use a photo
commercially even if a valid model release has been signed.
Defamatory, humiliating, or libelous
uses are specifically and emphatically PROHIBITED!
U.S. and International law does NOT ALLOW "libelous" or "defamatory"
or "humiliating" uses of a person's likeness even if a general
model release has been signed.
Examples: If someone is doing a brochure for an alcoholism
treatment program. They take a picture of a 45 year-old man
off a royalty-free disc and put him under the headline, "Two
Quarts of Vodka a day-- And Still Ticking." Or you're doing
a magazine article about incontinence in the elderly. Or the
headline of your ad is, "Only a Guy this Stupid Wouldn't Buy
our Product." They can't do it. If you read the fine print
of virtually every photo agency's license, you will see that
this sort of thing is expressly prohibited, no matter what.
What a client who needs to use an image for this kind of use
would need to do is obtain a specific release from the model
for the specific use they have in mind. It will involve an
additional fee payed to the model. It is the models right
to turn it down. The client may not, they absolutely must
not use an image in this fashion without specific permission
from the model to do so. It's the law.
If a model release has not been signed:
A photographer can take a photo of you, not get a model release,
and as long as the photographer is not selling a product with
that image they can use it. For example they can not put someones
image on their business flier (because they are selling their
service) but they can put it in an art show and sell the photo
as art.
*The full text on this topic can be found on http://www.comstock.com/
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