Monkey Selfie Case May Settle: PETA Knows It'll Lose, And The Photographer Is Broke
from the so-settlement-makes-sense dept
It may finally be ending. The dumbest copyright lawsuit we’ve seen in a long time (and that’s saying a lot) about a silly topic. We’ve been covering the story of the monkey selfie from basically the very beginning (and often get mentioned in stories about it, as we’ll discuss below). But, the story that began as a weird quirk of explaining how copyright law works — and how many people don’t believe it works the way it does — got stupid in a hurry once PETA and the formerly respected law firm of Irell & Manella got involved. And, now, finally, the case may be ending in a settlement.
A settlement totally makes sense here, because the plaintiff knows it’s going to lose in embarrassing fashion if the case moves forward, and the defendant is broke, in part because of this case (though some people — including the photographer — appear to be partially blaming us*). If you somehow haven’t followed this story the very, very quick recap is that a photographer named David Slater went to Indonesia where he was taking photographs in a national park, and at some point at least one (and possibly more?) macaque monkeys played with his camera and took some photos with it, including some selfies, which were mildly amusing. As we noted in a long discussion on this, technically the photos are almost certainly in the public domain (read that post to learn why if you don’t believe it). David Slater disagrees with this and insists the copyright is his, and has had various representatives at times send totally bogus and severely confused threat letters. However, nearly all serious legal commentary has recognized that the works are in the public domain. That’s just how copyright law works, whether you like it or not.
Either way, there’s one thing that Slater and I agree on: the monkey doesn’t hold the copyright… and PETA (an organization that often seems to care more about publicity stunts than animals) two years ago kicked off a monumentally dumb lawsuit against Slater, claiming that the monkey held the copyright and that PETA represented the monkey. And, again, this can’t be stated often enough: PETA brought on a previously respected copyright law firm, Irell & Manella, to handle this case and they proceeded to make some really crazy arguments, including suggesting that every work must have a copyright — apparently writing the public domain right out of the law.
Either way, PETA lost badly in court, but still appealed. That appeal has not gone well. At a hearing last month, it appears that the judges could barely contain their laughter at just how stupid a lawsuit this really is. PETA knows it’s going to lose and lose badly — and thus has every incentive to settle this case before such a ruling is released.
As for Slater, well, he’s been telling reporters that he’s completely broke — so clearly he has incentive to just get the case over with as well. And, I feel for him. Being sued over a completely bogus claim totally sucks. I know that all too well. So it’s pretty sensible that all the parties in the lawsuit have told the court to hold off on ruling while they work out a settlement.
And, really, what a despicable case this was by PETA and Irell & Manella. Yes, I know that PETA’s whole schtick is to do ridiculous publicity stunts, but this one had real costs. It wasted a bunch of time in the courts, and was really damaging to David Slater, who didn’t deserve to be dragged into court by such an organization. One hopes that, at the very least, part of the settlement includes an apology.
* So, this is kind of a separate issue, but Slater occasionally points to Techdirt’s articles about why the photos are in the public domain as part of the problem — and the recent reporting on his claims of being broke have more or less repeated this. The first report we saw, in the Guardian, mentions us and Wikipedia as “refusing” to take the images down — which… leaves out a big part of the story (i.e., it was in the context of explaining why the work was in the public domain under copyright law). We actually had a few angry people contact us over the Guardian story not realizing the details.
But that was nothing compared to what happened when the Daily Mail, the UK’s worst newspaper, basically tried to rewrite the Guardian story and twisted our role even more:
His problems began when Californian-based blog Techdirt and the online encyclopedia Wikipedia (whose mission statement is ‘to empower and engage people around the world to collect and develop educational content under a free licence or in the public domain’) muscled in.
“Muscled in?” Guys, all we did was write (accurately, I may add!) about the copyright issues when a monkey takes a selfie. That’s not “muscling in.” That’s journalism. The Daily Mail might want to try it some day.
They claimed the image was uncopyrightable because the monkey was the creator ? and so they uploaded the picture onto their websites, free for anyone to use. To Dave, this was an assault on his livelihood.
Understandably, he asked Techdirt and Wikipedia to stop using the pictures ? but they refused. Faced with little choice, Dave decided to sue for up to £18,000, saying: ‘There’s a lot more to copyright than who pushes the trigger.’
At least the Daily Mail mentions that we explained why the work is in the public domain, but they make it sound like we were the ones doing the initial distribution of the photo. That’s crazy. It was all over the internet. In fact, uh, we first read about the monkey in the Daily Fucking Mail. Seriously. Go look at the link in our first story. You want to know where we first got the photograph? The Daily Mail. Yet now the Daily Mail is blaming us for making the photo available? Are you fucking kidding me?
And, I have no idea what the hell they’re talking about saying that Slater sued us for £18,000. This is the first we’ve heard of it.
But, here’s the thing: after the Daily Mail article went online, we started getting quite a bit of hate mail, accusing us of bankrupting Slater. I feel bad for Slater, as his situation sounds bad. But we didn’t sue him. We didn’t take away his livelihood. We explained the law. That’s it. You might not like the law, but the law would have been the same whether or not we wrote about it. Slater wouldn’t have had the copyright either way. It’s fair to blame PETA for hurting Slater, because they sued him for no damn reason at all. But we just reported on the situation accurately — something it would be nice if the Daily Mail tried once in a while.
Filed Under: copyright, david slater, monkey selfie, naruto, public domain, settlement
Companies: irell & manella, peta
Comments on “Monkey Selfie Case May Settle: PETA Knows It'll Lose, And The Photographer Is Broke”
I also feel for Slater but let’s leave reminders here:
https://www.techdirt.com/articles/20110712/01182015052/monkeys-dont-do-fair-use-news-agency-tells-techdirt-to-remove-photos.shtml
https://www.techdirt.com/articles/20140806/07044228126/photographer-still-insisting-he-holds-copyright-photo-monkey-threatens-to-sue-wikimedia.shtml
He started the lawsuit happy environment and PETA was happy to jump in and throw a lot of shit in the fan.
That said, PETA is poisonous to the very cause they claim to fight for. I’m hoping they can’t settle and have to pay every single cent and the lawyers get sanctioned for the frivolous lawsuit. Let’s hope it gets too risky to defend PETA in courts so they’ll be neutralized on that front.
Perfect Shit Storm
So the photographer thought he hit the mother lode but in the end his greed and refusal to back down turned out to be his unraveling. This would make a great children’s story if it had not been told a million times already in every form imaginable. Well, almost every form. The one involving a person trying to exploit curiously vain monkeys who was in turn exploited by curiously vain apes posing as animal rights champions is a fresh new take. Now to figure out how to make it rhyme.
Re: Perfect Shit Storm
Moving On
The crazy popularity of one photograph is worth very little. Slater obviously thought that he’d won the lottery. TechDirt pointed out that the numbers on his ticket didn’t match the numbers in the drawing. Therefore, in his mind, it is TechDirt’s fault that he didn’t win the lottery.
What he doesn’t seem to grasp is that this was a fifteen-minutes-of-fame photograph. Everyone has moved on, except Slater and PETA. And now PETA is moving on because an adverse decision may cost them fees to Slater and, more importantly, simply doesn’t draw attention like it did a few years ago. No news is bad news for PETA.
P.S. Maybe you could sue the Daily Mail for defamation under the lax British laws to provide for your own defense. And these guys.
Re: Moving On
‘My daughter tells everyone her daddy took the monkey selfie, but I’ve got nothing to give her from it.
Either she needs more schooling, or maybe counseling; why is she calling her father a monkey anyway?
Re: Re: Moving On
‘My daughter tells everyone her daddy took the monkey selfie’
Uhh, isn’t selfie a contraction for self portrait? So this guy’s daughter is telling everyone her daddy is a monkey? Very perceptive child.
Re: Re: Re: Moving On
A self-photograph, specifically, and by connotation, a bad one (usually with an arm/stick in the frame, and often improperly framed).
Re: Moving On
What I don’t get is he could still capitalize off of it… He can make prints… he can sign it… he can literally do whatever he wants with this picture. Fair Use and Public Domain doesn’t mean that what he has created can’t be monetized… you just have to make a market for it.
A great example of this is I could print my favorite XKCD print off the internet and hang it on my wall (which is legal under CC BY-NC 2.5 license), but I’d rather spend $25 to buy it from the guy that created it. It helps him, I get signed art, and everyone leaves happy.
Re: Re: Moving On
He has been trying to do this for year, if it were not for Wikipedia promtoing theft of his work. I rememebr he offered free canvas prints. He donated to the monkeys off sales of his work. He seems to have done all the right things to help the monkeys but it’s only backfired each time because of sites like this encouraging theft, and of course the lying and detestable Wikipedia.
Re: Re: Re: Moving On
I hope you are being sarcastic. Otherwise you are a fucking idiot.
Re: Re: Re: Moving On
Since you are so fond of wikipedia you might want to try and read these:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theft
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copyright_infringement
Re: Re: Re:2 Moving On
Or the sheeple may like to fread this:
http://www.wikipediocracy.com
The attempted usurpation of fact by consensus. Rule by fake news. Wikipedia!
Re: Re: Re:3 Moving On
Yup – anything you disagree with is fake.
Re: Re: Re:3 Moving On
Yeah, using sheeple as a derogative totally convinces anyone that you’re right, genius!
Re: Re: Re: Moving On
Is “John” your middle name, David Slater?
Anyway, you may want to put the crack pipe down, I think it’s about to burn your fingers.
Re: Re: Re:2 Moving On
The usual unprovable unresearched assertions common to you Techsitians. Nice try Mike.
Re: Re: Re: Moving On
Actually, no. According to his website, that’s new as of last month:
Or am I not supposed to believe his website, either?
Re: Re: Re:2 Moving On
I’m always conflicted about promotions like that. On the one hand, sure it’s doing some good in a world that needs more good. On the other hand, I can just donate some money myself and you could be charging 10% less. Also then I’d get the tax write-off, not you.
Re: Re: Re: Moving On
Problem with this assessment is there is no infringement (or theft, if you prefer that term) because the photographer had no legal right to exclusive use of the photo to begin with. There is no copyright in it, and that would be his only means of controlling the photo’s reproduction etc. Since it is in the public domain and free for anyone to use, promoting “theft” of it is impossible.
this all applies to the U.S.
Re: Moving On
‘I didn’t want to make lots of money — I just wanted a fair wage for my work, something to pass on to our daughter.’
Well then maybe self-employment is the wrong avenue if he thinks that just putting in hard work = getting money.
Re: Moving On
So he letting the popularity of a picture taken by accident destroy his career as a photographer. That is a sign of jealousy to the point of insanity. He should have shrugged and moved on, and figured out how to get animals close to a camera he controlled, or had set tp as a trap camera.
Re: Moving On
You utterly pathetic morons. But this is what I have come to expect of techdirt and it’s self-serving, rejected by women- batchelors and spotty teenage tits stealing everything from pics to music to put on their social justice warrior youtube shite.
Re: Re: Moving On
Funny you should pick the name commonly assigned to people who have to pay for sex. Kinda Freudian me thinks.
Re: Re: Re: Moving On
Who uses ‘shite’ anyway?
Do London Johns use that phrase? Certainly not in the US.
Re: Re: Moving On
Classic projection
Re: Re: Moving On
Jealous much?
Re: Re: Haha! Have a +1 funny for reminding me of this...
Mr. Wiggin: …I see. Well, of course, this is just the sort of blinkered philistine pig ignorance I’ve come to expect from you non-creative garbage. You sit there on your loathsome spotty behinds squeezing blackheads, not caring a tinker’s cuss for the struggling artist. You excrement, you whining hypocritical toadies with your colour TV sets and your Tony Jacklin golf clubs and your bleeding masonic secret handshakes. You wouldn’t let me join, would you, you blackballing bastards. Well I wouldn’t become a Freemason if you went down on your lousy stinking purulent knees and begged me.
http://www.mit.edu/afs.new/sipb/user/ayshames/Python/ARCHITEC.PYTHON
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RicaXxiU1WM
Re: Moving On
Using your own child to spread lies for you is despicable.
Re: Moving On
Most hurtfully, he’s stopped taking pictures. ‘
Slater – or the monkey?
Re: Moving On
I think it’s also worth nothing that this picture was popular to begin with BECAUSE it was a monkey, not Slater, that created it. If he’d managed to make the same image with his own hands it wouldn’t have achieved the same notoriety. Sure it was a good picture and he could have made some money, but it wouldn’t have been a lottery ticket.
Where did the guy get this idea that a single photograph could be sold for so much he could send his kid to private schools for the rest of her education. It could have all been solved be proclaims! If could I could have made money off of it. Who are all these people looking to license this photograph besides news people talking about the copywrite suit?
Re: Re:
Well maybe because its been used by companies, including this one, to promote themselves. Over 50 million uses I believe. The most popular image since the moon landings I would guess. So why won;t he think he could have made enough money to support his child and family? You try being a freelance photographer when sites like TechShit encourage the public to steal?
Re: Re: Re:
Im sorry you don’t understand copyright law. Do however try to keep your whining to a minimum, snowflake. The adults are trying to have a conversation.
Re: Re: Re: Re:
I can see you’re an American lefty snowflake yourself, Mr. Anonymous Coward. The world has had enough of yankie nazis posing as socially aware “wawwiors”!
ANONYMOUS and COWARDLY. Social Justice Mangina Owning “Wawwior”. Too afraid to raise your pathetic head into the spotlight eh? Get into the man’s world little fluffy boy. Thanks for your petty little whine Fluffy.
Re: Re: Re:2 Re:
Sorry you got triggered, boy.
Re: Re: Re:3 Re:
What’s being triggered, girl?
Do explain.
Re: Re: Re:4 Re:
Genuine question: why are you using “girl” as an insult? What, precisely, is wrong about being a girl?
Re: Re: Re:5 Re:
He seems to be saying that he thinks lowly of females, that probably means he is a bigot.
Re: Re: Re:5 Re:
I have it on good authority that they have cooties.
Re: Re: Re:2 Re:
That’s really funny coming from someone themselves posting anonymously. Hey, John, if you’re so brave, go ahead and post your real full name and address.
Re: Re: Re:3 Re:
After you Mr Trump….
Re: Re: Re:
Earning the money to get your girl through college in 5 minutes of work, is the gamblers delusion.
It’s used by copyright industry to get a steady flow of reasonable content cheaply.
Daily Mail
If the Daily Mail is the worst paper in the world, why did Techdirt believe the quotes and story in it back in 2011? A case of confirmation bias maybe? After all, you did appear to base your arguments upon this newspaper and the quotes allegedly from Slater’s own mouth. Looks like Techdirt are trying to wriggle from guilt. Did you ever read the story in The Guardian or on Slater’s website itself, from which it is clear the monkey only pressed the button hwereas Slater set up the camera? But Masnick and his childish grouppies want the public to somehow think photography is only about button pressing. You low lifes! As a site claiming some expertise on copyright, you are provably fraudulaent, and if anyone ever believes this site again, or worse, steals Slater’s images because of this, is possibly going to regret it.
Re: Joking
Are you joking?
Re: Daily Mail
Nice try. In that very first Daily Mail story, Slater admitted that the macaque knocked over the camera and then proceeded to take "hundreds" of photos:
Only after the copyright issue came to light did Slater first claim that he was the creative force behind the photographs:
Only after meeting with a lawyer did he change his tune from hope-the-monkey-takes-a-family-album to it-was-all-me-I-promise-and-I’m-sweaty-and-anguished.
Re: Re: Daily Mail
Why do some people believe everything a newspaper states when it confirm their bias, and then say they are the worst newspaper when it doesn’t suit?
When you read Slater’s original story up against the Daily Mail story you use to back up your argument (so The Daily Mail is a reputable source for you, TechDescartes!!!!) it is very clear what happened. Slater set up the shoot, dialled in the settings, let the monkey press the button. Slater has copyright. What is it about your doublespeaking thick head you can’t grasp? Answer – you believe in Techdirt. Nuff Said my controlled sheeple memeber.
Re: Re: Re: Daily Mail
Sheeple, That’s the free space on the conspiracy nut bingo card.
Re: Re: Re:2 Daily Mail
Nah, it;’s an accurate description of Techdirt followers – yeah, followers. FOLLOWERS. UNTHINKING FOLLOWERS… or in shorthand, Sheeple.
Re: Re: Re:3 Daily Mail
You see that everybody… he came up with that insult all by himself! What a big boy!
Re: Re: Re:4 Daily Mail
Small penised coward hiding behind anonymity. Cowardly moron. You need to cum into the man’s world, because I can see women aren’t your thing. Idiot.
Re: Re: Re:5 Daily Mail
It’s getting more Freudian in here by the minute.
Re: Re: Re:5 Daily Mail
This sounds like it came from Trump’s twitter account
Re: Re: Re:6 Daily Mail
Maybe I am Trump, clown.
Re: Re: Re:7 Daily Mail
No maybe about it, you are definitely a trump clown.
Re: Re: Re:7 Daily Mail
Sure act like it
Re: Re: Re: Daily Mail
No, John. Slater didn’t "set up the shoot, dial[] in the settings, let the monkey press the button." I quoted the original Daily Mail story above. I’ll quote it again:
Are you saying that the Daily Mail misquoted Slater? Or that Slater was lying when he said that? It seems that the only one who has a problem with the original Daily Mail story is you.
Re: Re: Re:2 Daily Mail
So the Daily Mail is reputable then! Why keep quoting from the Daily Mail. Your LEADER says it’s the worst paper in the world! Get with the preaching and do as your master commands.
Can I suggest you quote all the newspapers from this year, or even Slater’s website, or the Guardian from 2011? Why you insisting the Daily Mail is reputable now?
Re: Re: Re:3 Daily Mail
I’m beginning to think a camera isn’t the only thing the monkey got a hold of….
Re: Re: Re:2 Daily Mail
More to the point the photo is only of interest if the monkey took it. If he took it it has no special value.
SO Slater loses either way. If he took the picture then he has the copyright – but the picture is just another picture of a monkey.
Re: Re: Re:3 Reputations: Hard to build up, trivial to destroy
That really is the punchline to the whole thing, the fact that his short-sighted greed completely destroyed any value the picture might have had for him.
If he ‘won’ and somehow attained the rights to the photo by claiming to have set the shot up then it’s useless, as it’s just another picture of a monkey, of which I imagine there’s plenty.
He could have accepted that the very thing that kept him from owning it, the fact that a monkey took it, made for an interesting story and gone from there, adding that little tidbit to his resume and using it to get his name more widely known, but thanks to his greed the only thing he’s likely to be remembered for is being the person who tried to shake people down over a photo he didn’t own, only to be dragged into a train-wreck of a PR-stunt/lawsuit.
As it stands with the case likely finally coming to a close the monkey is the only one who comes out of the whole debacle not looking foolish/greedy/absurd, and that is all sorts of ridiculous(even if it does make for a good source of schadenfreude).
Re: Re: Re:4 Reputations: Hard to build up, trivial to destroy
“the monkey is the only one who comes out of the whole debacle not looking foolish/greedy/absurd”
Of the involved parties, the monkey was throwing the least amount of feces around.
Re: Re: Re:3 Daily Mail
Yup, damned if he did, damned if he didn’t.
Re: Re: Re: Daily Mail
This is what an argumentum ad hominem is, even if the hominem is actually a corporation. The fact that The Daily Mail is a ball of crap does not have any bearing on undisputed quotations. If they are in dispute, Slater could have taken a far more profitable course of suing the paper for libel, in the land of easy libel suits, no less. Perhaps you could point out where his original story has any bearing on this.
Re: Re: Re:2 Daily Mail
Bullshititum dominatum.
The story in the daily Mail was clearly a fun story. Are some cult Techshites here so naive to not know English humor? It was fun and I guess inaccurate to encourage laughs.
Re: Re: Re:3 Daily Mail
"Are some cult Techshites here so naive to not know English humor"
Well clearly you don’t. In the land of fish & chips, orderly queues, and Monty Python, it’s spelt "humour".
Re: Re: Re:4 Daily Mail
We also, sadly, know that the fun and inaccurate Daily Fail is taken seriously by too large a number of the population. It’s no laughing matter when you know that people are literally voting as a direct result of those lies.
Re: Re: Re: Daily Mail
Skip the whole TechDirt fiasco and just answer me one question. Why is Slater losing the lawsuit then? Should have been open and shut case and he owns the copyright, instead it is this long going copyright battle.
Re: Daily Mail
Exactly! Photography isn’t about buttons. I mean, the real unsung heroes are the manufacturers who make the cameras. They’re the ones getting screwed here. Without them, Slater couldn’t have set up the camera so the monkey could push the button to take the selfie. Who’s looking out for the camera manufacturers? Certainly not Peta. And not Techdirt.
Re: Re: Daily Mail
And who set up the internet for you to Troll? Everything you say is really down to what the internet tells you to think. Sheeple is to kinda word for Techdirtshitheads.
Re: Re: Re: Daily Mail
Sorry for the delay in responding, I’m waiting for the Internet to tell me what to say. I’m going to head back to the flock now while I wait. Perhaps I’ll have something by the time you crawl out from under your bridge tomorrow.
Re: Re: Re: Daily Mail
You sound like an absolutely lovely person.
Re: Daily Mail
Go home Shiva you’re still drunk.
Re: Re: Daily Mail
It’s not Shiva, I’m pretty sure it’s Slater himself.
Re: Re: Re: Daily Mail
It might not be, Slater has moved on, per the article.
The Daily Mail has oases of news in a sea of twaddle. It often makes up stories, e.g. the psycho ex-girlfriend dentist. It’s basically a rage manufacturing machine, so the Slater story fits nicely in there.
Slater unfortunately believed that a) Copyright is a fountain flowing deep and wide and b) that one virally popular pic would see him in clover for life. That’s not the way copyright and licencing works. However, as other TDers have written, even now he could sell prints on t-shirts or mugs, etc., and make money off them. The trouble with the pics being in the public domain, though, is that anyone else can, too. Being the man who owned the camera ought to count for something among buyers, though.
I don’t think he’s greedy, just a man who can’t see past a cherished principle.
Re: Re: Re: Daily Mail
Nah, I don’t think that it’s Slater. It’s somebody who’s making Slater more of a fool than he actually is (I think Slater is just somebody who thought he’d hit the lottery and got greedy). The John used the word “sheeple”, which I would hope hasn’t infected British English yet. I’m not sure why an American rightwinger (that’s the group fond of that word) would be so adamantly on Slater’s side, though. Maybe the John is one of the presently unemployed Prenda Law folks?
Re: Re: Re:2 Daily Mail
I think it’s our friend Fake!Shiva Hamilton, a drama troll trying to start a proxy flame war. The misogyny was the giveaway. The only way to win is not to play.
Re: Daily Mail
why did Techdirt believe the quotes and story in it back in 2011?
Why, are they disputed? What’s your point?
Looks like Techdirt are trying to wriggle from guilt.
Your general intent here is obvious, but makes as little sense as the string of words you used in attempt to convey it.
As a site claiming some expertise on copyright, you are provably fraudulaent,
[Aforementioned proof required]
and if anyone ever believes this site again, or worse, steals Slater’s images because of this, is possibly going to regret it.
Excepting that Slater’s monkey selfie pics are in the public domain by definition. Awesome he set up the camera and all, but he had no control over the actual subject of the photograph(s).
The sad thing here is he could have converted interest in this photo into lots of well-paying work and sales instead of trying to exert control over one image. Here’s the guy who goes to some interesting places, and not without effort or hardship, and seems to have done pretty good work. And any of his work would have a measure of recognition as "from the man who brought us the monkey selfie". Now he’s the guy who sent wack legal threats then got sued by a non-profit organization of loons. I rather imagine one bit of recognition, and not losing interest in one’s calling, is better than the other form of recognition and being too upset to continue as a photographer. It’s the result of poor decision making and an unreasonable will to control influenced by a horrifically bad climate of copyright trolling.
Re: Re: Daily Mail
You are a classic example of knowing zip about copyright and public domain especially. The proff of techdirt’s fraudulence is in the way you encourage therft of a copyrighted work without so much as a reasoned argument or effort to research the topic from the source – Mr Slater’s website! QED.
But this is why you, Orbitalinserting knobhead, visit this site isn’t it? To be comforted by like minded thieves who wish to ruin artists livelihoods. Let’s face it, you are so talentless you can’t create your own works of art. You want to be a parasite don;t you?
Copyright is an incentive for creative people to entertain us, and Slater certainly has done this. he derves to profit from his pics.
He shoul also be recognised for the conservation aspect of all this. Something Techshits will never care about I reckon.
Actions of people like you who encourage theft by stating a falsehood about the pics public domain status, is stifling creativity. Techdirt and Wikipedia are clearly monopolising the idea of steal first, claim innocence later. Copyright is Slaters and he should determine who uses it and how much he wants to make from it.
Re: Re: Re: Daily Mail
Nothing is sadder or more bitter than a failed artist.
Re: Re: Re: Daily Mail
Even if it WAS copyrighted, by reporting about it, TechDirt would be within the boundaries of fair use to post the picture.
But the idea of fair use burns you like acid, too, doesn’t it?
Re: Re: Re:2 Daily Mail
And once again the sheepla who follow Masnick in their unswerving faith based religion know nothing about Fair Use either.
What is fair about accreditation to a monkey or Wikipedia or the public domain when it is a lie. What is fair to rip off a photographer’s copyrighted pic? Know what you are talking about befiore you try to be clever. Being clever is not following the Sheeple on this site but it is thinking for yourself and doing your own research.
Re: Re: Re:3 Daily Mail
You might try that "research" thing yourself, even though you keep imagining reasons why any source we find is invalid.
If Fair Use is in play, it doesn’t matter who owns the copyright. Fair Use would still apply if FULL AND UNDISPUTED copyright was held by the photographer.
That said, Wikipedia has never been attributed ownership of the picture. The macaque definitely took the picture, though, so if he was legally capable of holding a copyright, it would be his. Since the "artist" can’t have a copyright, then the photo can only be public domain.
If you want more research than I can get from reputable sources, that’s called "original research," and it’s generally considered unacceptable without peer review.
Re: Re: Re:4 Daily Mail
The MOST invalid source of the monkey selfie saga is Techshit.
Macaques don’t take pictures, humans do. Macaques press buttons, humans set up the rest. Why do you wawwiors not see this.
And are you now suggesting the Daily Nail is peer reviewed?
Is Wikipedia peer reviewed?
Idiots under the spell of consensus reality would say so.
Intelligent folk, including law courts, see facts, not Techshit drivel.
Re: Re: Re: Daily Mail
Re: Re: Re:2 Daily Mail
Yeh right! Mr Slater was the only person there. His account is as close as you get to the source. His argument is valid not techshit’s nor any other anonymous coward trying to justify their theft or girly beliefs in what is fair.
Re: Re: Re:3 Daily Mail
Re: Re: Re:3 Daily Mail
“justify their theft or girly beliefs”
David, why do you hate girls so? Couldn’t get a date to the prom?
Re: Re: Re:4 Daily Mail
Is it his mother that he hates?
Re: Re: Re: Daily Mail
“Copyright is an incentive for creative people to entertain us, and Slater certainly has done this.”
Except for the part where he specifically said that none of the monkey images involved his own creativity, thus negating his copyright claim.
This isn’t a difficult concept to understand, and the contention around it is puzzling.
Either Slater lied and negated his own copyright, or he told the truth and doesn’t deserve it.
Re: Re: Re:2 Daily Mail
Where did Slaetr specifically say this – give me a video of this, not a cherry picked Daily Mail account that must be true – unless it you don;t like it, then it’s a lie. Here’s to the Doublespeaking brainwashed fools that you are.
Why do you lot believe everything you read? You must be American for goodness sakes!!! The world knows you are controlled this way!
Confirmational bias is the answer. This has no meaning in law. You’re a fwaud Techshit. I am beginning to believe that Masnick is behind everyone of the comments here. A fwaud Mr Masthick, you’re a fwaud. Stop trawwing your own site Mr Masthick.
Re: Re: Re:3 Daily Mail
Do you smell toast?
Re: Re: Re:4 Daily Mail
Toast with bullshit spread upon it – yeah.
Re: Re: Re:4 Daily Mail
He sniffs paint.
Re: Re: Re: Daily Mail
John, please can you cite the piece of legislation that proves you are correct instead of merely insulting those of us who disagree with you? It makes it hard to take you seriously.
Re: Re: Re:2 Daily Mail
You can start with 17 U.S. Code. I don’t think there is an explicit definition of “author” there, but the use of the term throughout the code indicates that it is contemplated to be a human being. Also, back in 2014, the Copyright Office, who is tasked with interpreting the code and issuing rules, advised that works created by animals were not subject to copyright. The court is following along that same line of reasoning. If we want to extend copyright protection to works created by animals, Congress would have to amend the copyright act to provide for it.
Re: Re: Re: Daily Mail
Hey John, better get to work and let Judge Orrick and the U.S. Copyright Office know that they don’t know anything about copyright and the public domain. Maybe they haven’t looked at Slater’s website.
http://www.npr.org/sections/thetwo-way/2016/01/07/462245189/federal-judge-says-monkey-cant-own-copyright-to-his-selfie
could have avoided it all
by claiming to either trigger the camera remotely, or claimed to have set it (the camera) up to take pictures continuously – the entire debacle could have been avoided. But Slater did get that valuable 15 minutes of fame, yes?
Re: could have avoided it all
He has, NOW.
The stories about the selfies hit in July 2011. In September his website changed, giving a new story that he set up remote triggers, with autofocus, and flashguns.
Only problem is, he said most of the photos were out of focus in July, and the pictures quite clearly show no flash (you can make out the gaps in the jungle canopy in the eyes) and no tripod.
He tried exactly what you said, but too late.
of course, a remotely triggered photo wouldn’t have made it interesting anyway, there are loads of those.
The very fact that made it marketable, is the fact that makes it uncopyrightable.
Re: Re: could have avoided it all
Prove how his website changed. Specious argument in the extreme.
Your argument is as fallacious as Masthick. And again, you quote the “worst paper in the world ” – not by me but by your cult leader Masthick.
Re: Re: Re: could have avoided it all
…did you just misspell your own name?
Re: Re: Re:2 could have avoided it all
Cut John/Johm a break. He’s got thousands of monkey submissions to review before he “OK”s one thru to be published here in the comments section.
Re: Re: Re: could have avoided it all
The original monkey page as of January 21, 2011:
https://web.archive.org/web/20110121151100/http://www.djsphotography.co.uk:80/Tropical%20Forests/Sulawesi%20Macaques.htm
The changed version with the camera setup story added, among other things, as of September 3, 2011:
https://web.archive.org/web/20110903035338/http://www.djsphotography.co.uk:80/Tropical%20Forests/Sulawesi%20Macaques.htm
Re: Re: Re: could have avoided it all
Easy. go look it up in archive.org (and I have now saved copies)
https://web.archive.org/web/20110121151100/http://www.djsphotography.co.uk:80/Tropical%20Forests/Sulawesi%20Macaques.htm
thats Jan 2011
July 7th it’s gone https://web.archive.org/web/20110707120244/http://www.djsphotography.co.uk:80/Tropical%20Forests/Sulawesi%20Macaques.htm
Still down (or removed) August 7th
It’s not until September 2011 that the new story is there
https://web.archive.org/web/20110903035338/http://www.djsphotography.co.uk:80/Tropical%20Forests/Sulawesi%20Macaques.htm
BTW, Since you hate the Daily Mail, hows about the Telegraph, which carried the exact same story verbatum
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/howaboutthat/8615859/Monkey-steals-camera-to-snap-himself.html
If he’s claiming they’re lying about what he said, maybe he can sue them for libel and make his money back.
Re: Re: Re: could have avoided it all
Isn’t your daughter already missing you?
He wants money for his Monkey Selfie?
I hope he gets a fortune from PETA.
There is a reason it’s second name is the “Daily Fail”. Yes occasionally they do a reasonable article, but that is like finding a gold nugget in a pile of shit. Who’s gonna want to dig in a pile of shit for that rare gold nugget?
Re: Re:
And Techdirt’s more well known name is TechSHIT.
Re: Re: Re:
See he came up with that all by himself too. He is a big boy now!
Re: Re: Re: Re:
If he only spent as much time on spelling as on trolling…
Re: Re: Re:
Oh snap, did you come up with that sick burn all by yourself, or did you have help from a monkey?
Re: Re: Re: Re:
Yeah, came up with this myself. It’s called cweativity my girl. Dya know what cweativity is girl? It’s something you haven’t … girly boy.
Re: Re: Re: Re:
Well, monkeys DO have a habit of flinging feces at those they perceive as an irratant, which would go pretty far in John’s/Johm’s trolling attempts. He’s throwing out a lot of shit, but has only succeeded in showing himself to be bananas.
Re: Re: Re:
For somebody that feels that way about Techdirt, you sure do spend a lot of time here in the comments!! You know the (X) button you can click to close this window? I recommend doing so such that you will no longer have to put up with this site and how it makes your feelz hurtz.
Re: Re: Re: Re:
Stumbled on this site, unfortunately a few years ago. Saw it on Google. Techshit offends me because it is full of shit. But hey, I’m having fun. It’s easy here. You lot have no intelligent arguments about copyright. I’m trolling the trolls!
Re: Re: Re:2 Re:
Oh yes who, but a five year old can argue against the genius that is Techshit. We are ceretainly in awe of your ability shit the thread.
Re: Re: Re:3 Re:
As this website and comment section deserves the greatest amount of monkey shit possible. I do hope Mr Slater is reading this and tells his attorney.
Re: Re: Re:2 Re:
I like this guy. He really has something to say:
“Bloviate Blather, Bloviate Blather, Bloviate Blather…”
The he gets creative:
“Blather Bloviate, Blather Bloviate, Blather Bloviate…”
Can’t wait to see what he comes up with next.
Re: Re: Re:3 Re:
Hey Mangina, you daring wawwior dude you. You are so creative maybe you’ld like to copyright “biather biovate, biovate biather, biovate blather”. I would add to that sentence Bullshit, cos you are full of the stuff.
Re: Re: Re:4 Re:
Just as I suspected…eloquence personified.
Re: Re: Re:4 Re:
There’s a guy round here that likes to eat paint. I think you two would really get along. You could go out for a Ttianium White milkshake, get to know each other. Maybe fall in love,and have a couple of children with an odd number of chromosomes. Finally find the happiness you seek in his pale anemic arms.
Re: Re: Re:2 Re:
Most sane people would simply not visit a site they do not like as there are so many, but John is no slacker… oh no. He goes to each and every site that he does not like and posts comments in a valiant attempt to educate all us idiots and morons – oh and girls too. The next great superhero JOHM in spandex and cape risking his life and limb for our safety – what a guy!
Re: Re: Re:2 Re:
You’re not trolling the trolls, you’re flinging poo. No wonder you’re so impressed with a peer of yours taking a selfie.
Re: Re: Re:
It’s an honour to meet you. You’re exactly the way I expected you to be.
Re: Re: Re: Re:
Pathetic comment from a pathetic trollite of Masnick. No honor in meeting you Fwank.
No copyright on the Daily Mail story
clearly it was written and published by monkeys too.
Wait, the monkey?
Now that you mention it, I do see him pretty frequently in the comments.
Re: Re:
Masnick isn’t a monkey, he’s a failed copyright expert.
Re: Re: Re:
How do you define “failed copyright expert”? What proof do you have of his failure?
Re: Re: Re: Re:
Trollogic: Mike doesn’t suck the ‘AA’s cocks, so therefore he MUST be wrong.
Re: Re: Re: Re:
Wait, I can’t see the comment you’re replying to. Who’s a failed copyright expert?
…am I a failed copyright expert?
I guess it's too late now...
He should have just given the monkey a banana and called the selfie a work for hire…
Re: I guess it's too late now...
Did anyone else know he did not take the photo? Was he the only one there at the time?
If so, why not just say he did and all this silliness would have been avoided.
Re: Re: I guess it's too late now...
Think about it: would anyone have cared about the photo if he said he took it? I mean sure, it’s a nice shot, but the only thing that truly stands out about it is the fact that it’s the “monkey selfie”. I can hardly imagine the world being swept by viral headlines about “Nature Photographer Takes Kinda Cool Photo Of Monkey”
He may want to have it both ways (photo made famous for being a monkey selfie, but belongs to him) but he can’t.
Re: Re: Re: I guess it's too late now...
There is one more happenstance that should be pointed out: the rise of the word "selfie." It was the OED’s word of the year in 2013:
One has to wonder whether the interest in this photo even would be the same if it hit the Internet today:
This photo rode the "selfie" wave. That wave has passed.
Re: Re: Re: I guess it's too late now...
Good point, and is seems he has blown his 15 seconds of fame.
It's been nice to meet Techshit acolites
Nice to know you lot, I have work to do. You may think of getting some work yourselves someday. Stop watching porn is my advice to you all.
Re: It's been nice to meet Techshit acolites
Right, that jizz ain’t gonna mop up itself.
Re: It's been nice to meet Techshit acolites
Wait JohM!
No!!!
JohM, come back JohM!
Naruto is a great troll
PETA and someone that goes by ‘john’, have bitten on the bait. There is no wonder why Naruto has that shit eating grin.
Maybe Naruto needs to hire a lawyer to sue for misappropriation. Call it the Crested Macaques Survival Fund. Maybe Jeff Kerr would do it pro bono. He is familiar with Naruto by now (but not legally a friend), and he has access to plenty of photographic evidence that he could obtain for free from the internet.
Naruto would have to appear in court, but that could probably be handled remotely using the internet, and imagine this, a streaming camera!
Naruto could even then do a live demo for the court demonstrating that Naruto does in fact understand cam tech!
Why PETA did not think of this in first place is a mystery.
Fraudster?
It sounds to me like Slater was hoping to pull off a fraud by claiming a copyright that he didn’t have. However, the publicity in the press from Techdirt and others made that fraud more difficult. So, yeah, I could see how that would be a problem for him. And I’m glad.
'John' -- Care to Share?
John,
Masnick has given his viewpoint on multiple occasions and has used logic, reason, and all here are pretty familiar with his stance.
Do you care to share what you believe to the be actual rules on the matter of copyright? I see you lashing out at others, but not contributing to the conversation at hand. It seems to me that you believe Slater has a valid copyright; and with this being a law blog and all, do you care to counterpoint with reasoned logic what your interpretation of the law is? Citations help when making a case, so please include any that are applicable.
Re: 'John' -- Care to Share?
Honestly, it’d be better if everybody would realize he’s just a troll and stop responding to him.
Re: Re: 'John' -- Care to Share?
Never in the years I’ve been here have I seen Techdirt commenters get trolled so badly. It’s been damn embarrassing to read so many of the responses to this clown.
Well, I’ll be a monkey’s uncle…
Everyone...
…please, don’t feed the trolls.
Live by the sword, die by the sword
and the defendant is broke, in part because of this case (though some people — including the photographer — appear to be partially blaming us).
If the fact that he didn’t own a single photo was enough to completely tank his finances… then he was doomed from the get-go from banking his entire career on one photo. Even assuming he did have full rights over that single photo the odds of him being able to base a successful career on it were zero to none. It was an interesting photo thanks to the circumstances of it’s creation, but it certainly wasn’t ‘able to live comfortably for the rest of your life’ or even ‘send your child to university’ levels of interesting/valuable.
I would feel sorry for him having to pay out the nose in legal fees, but as Ninja pointed out he went legal first, so that bit strikes me as a ‘hoist by your own petard’, or perhaps ‘turnabout is fair play’.
JMT got it right
“Never in the years I’ve been here have I seen Techdirt commenters get trolled so badly. It’s been damn embarrassing to read so many of the responses to this clown.”
Johm was actually one of the most blatant I’ve ever seen here. Maybe that brings out the worst in us all…
You can always tell when Techdirt have a factually unimpeachable stance on an issue – the comments are filled with some kind of deranged performance art. We don’t even get the usual contrarian trolls and attempts at misdirection. We just get ranting from someone who is pretending to have completely lost his mind (or, at least, we hope it’s pretend).
“Go look at the link in our first story. You want to know where we first got the photograph? The Daily Mail. Yet now the Daily Mail is blaming us for making the photo available? Are you fucking kidding me?”
The Fail have never let things like consistency, honesty and facts stop them from pursuing what they think will sell. You just happened to originally stumble across a story that they didn’t care enough about at the time to lie about. Perhaps, being honest on those kind of fluff stories (as this was to them at the time) is how they stop the husks of their souls from completely dying over their daily work of fabrication. Now that they have agendas and narratives they want to push, they will reject any such attempts at actual journalism.
Re: Re:
Yup, and there you are, commenting. Self diagnosis?
Re: Re: Re:
No, I was referring to “John”, but there’s always room for other people to show themselves up. You, at least, try to act like a sane person while you distort the truth.
Re: Re: Re:
It’s hilarious and comforting to know you will consistently come to the defense of the nutjobs and consider your input, like the above, to be Pulitzer-worthy material (so you can also whine about it when your diminutive, sad attempt at contribution is reported).
Physician heal thyself!
Poor Naruto
Now poor Naruto, with the litigation behind him, can move on to other ambitions. Such as running for US President. He can’t do worse than we have now. And I get the impression there may be a job opening soon.
“Copying is all that is, or ever was, or ever will be”, unlike copyright.