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From: Jim Henderson
Subject: Re: Reflecting (and bent) torus on checkered plane
Date: 26 Aug 2009 13:18:20
Message: <4a956e5c$1@news.povray.org>
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On Wed, 26 Aug 2009 09:08:52 -0700, Darren New wrote:
> Stephen wrote:
>> I can't quite get my head around how a photograph of a piece of public
>> art can be copyrighted. And no I don't mean to open up a discussion ;)
>
> Certainly the photograph can be copyrighted. :-)
Indeed upon creation there is an implied copyright already applied. :-)
Jim
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Invisible wrote:
>>> The US do have some crazy copyright laws.
>>
>> There's capitalism for you!
>
> NO, THIS IS CAPITALISM. BUT YOU DO TEND TO FIND IT IN LICENSE AGREEMENTS
> FOR SOME REASON...
"CAPS LOCK IS CRUISE CONTROL FOR COOL"
"...but even with cruise control, you still have to steer"
--
Tim Cook
http://empyrean.freesitespace.net
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On Wed, 26 Aug 2009 09:08:52 -0700, Darren New <dne### [at] sanrrcom> wrote:
>Stephen wrote:
>> I can't quite get my head around how a photograph of a piece of public art can
>> be copyrighted. And no I don't mean to open up a discussion ;)
>
>Certainly the photograph can be copyrighted. :-)
>
I know.
>Plus, making a photograph is reproducing the work, so that's also a
>copyright violation. Just because it's visible to the public doesn't mean
>it's *yours*. The work was commissioned to get people to go to that part of
>town to look at it. The purpose is defeated if you let people copy it.
>
I would have thought that the more people that saw the photograph, the better to
fulfil the purpose.
>Would you object to someone building a copy of your public artwork and
>putting it somewhere else?
No, I would be chuffed.
Seriously I would be pleased. I would like to be credited but if I saw any of my
PovRay images on the web I would be over the moon. But then, chance is a fine
thing.
--
Regards
Stephen
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Warp wrote:
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:SBC_sculpture_daytime.jpg
>
> Almost looks like raytraced, but seems to be just a photo.
>
It's pretty, but a little too big and lonesome all by itself IMO. A
mathematical "zoo" with a variety of shapes would have been cooler. Also
could use a bit of greenery around it. The sculpture garden in DC is
kind of anticlimactic and blah (except for the fountain in the center),
so maybe the idea wouldn't work.
-Mike
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From: Sabrina Kilian
Subject: Re: Reflecting (and bent) torus on checkered plane
Date: 26 Aug 2009 23:45:41
Message: <4a960165$1@news.povray.org>
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Darren New wrote:
> Plus, making a photograph is reproducing the work, so that's also a
> copyright violation. Just because it's visible to the public doesn't
> mean it's *yours*. The work was commissioned to get people to go to
> that part of town to look at it. The purpose is defeated if you let
> people copy it.
>
That is one of those gray areas that I can't find any cases going
significantly one way or the other. If the work is displayed in a
private gallery, private meaning not public but may allow public access
at certain times, certainly there is copyright and it would be
infringement to take a picture. Some galleries want that copyright
restriction for as long as the original is in a private gallery, even
well past the death of the creator and the expiration of the most
lengthy copyright laws.
For a work that is displayed in public, on public land . . . Well, it
would be like Ford* trying to claim copyright infringement over every
photograph of a Mustang**. They could do it if they were brave enough,
but some judge is going to break legal ground deciding the case.
*Car company
**famous model of car that they produced
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From: Jim Henderson
Subject: Re: Reflecting (and bent) torus on checkered plane
Date: 27 Aug 2009 00:41:34
Message: <4a960e7e$1@news.povray.org>
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On Wed, 26 Aug 2009 23:45:41 -0400, Sabrina Kilian wrote:
> For a work that is displayed in public, on public land . . . Well, it
> would be like Ford* trying to claim copyright infringement over every
> photograph of a Mustang**. They could do it if they were brave enough,
> but some judge is going to break legal ground deciding the case.
IIRC, didn't Toyota try to get its logos removed from websites that were
critical of their products? Or some other manufacturer?
Jim
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From: Darren New
Subject: Re: Reflecting (and bent) torus on checkered plane
Date: 27 Aug 2009 01:07:33
Message: <4a961495$1@news.povray.org>
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Sabrina Kilian wrote:
> For a work that is displayed in public, on public land
http://www.copyright.gov/help/faq/faq-protect.html
You can copyright a building. I don't see why you can't copyright a piece of
sculpture in the public. At least currently in the USA.
--
Darren New, San Diego CA, USA (PST)
Understanding the structure of the universe
via religion is like understanding the
structure of computers via Tron.
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Sabrina Kilian schrieb:
> Some galleries want that copyright
> restriction for as long as the original is in a private gallery, even
> well past the death of the creator and the expiration of the most
> lengthy copyright laws.
Hmm... just found this on http://www.copyright.gov/:
"Mere ownership of a book, manuscript, painting, or any
other copy or phonorecord does not give the possessor
the copyright. The law provides that transfer of ownership
of any material object that embodies a protected work
does not of itself convey any rights in the copyright"
So no, the galleries have /no/ copyright on the work, i.e. they can
/not/ prohibit anyone from copying it by virtue of using a camera.
(They /can/ possibly prohibit use of cameras on their premises, but
that's another issue...)
All this valid for the US only of course. And IANAL.
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From: scott
Subject: Re: Reflecting (and bent) torus on checkered plane
Date: 27 Aug 2009 03:04:10
Message: <4a962fea@news.povray.org>
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> Would you object to someone building a copy of your public artwork and
> putting it somewhere else?
What about if someone aimed a video camera at your artwork and displayed it
on a big TV across the other side of town?
What about if it was visible on Google maps?
IMO once you make something available to the public (ie they can just see it
for free with no restrictions) then you can't really do much about people
copying it. If you want to enforce restrictions then make it impossible for
people to see until they have agreed to your terms and conditions. This is
what happens when you go to watch Formula 1, even the free testing sessions
which are "open" to the public, you still need to get a ticket and agree to
the T&Cs before you are allowed to enter (this includes agreeing not using
any photos or videos for commercial purposes).
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From: Darren New
Subject: Re: Reflecting (and bent) torus on checkered plane
Date: 27 Aug 2009 12:46:35
Message: <4a96b86b$1@news.povray.org>
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scott wrote:
> IMO once you make something available to the public (ie they can just
> see it for free with no restrictions) then you can't really do much
> about people copying it.
Of course you can. You can sue them for copying it. You can have someone
there to tell them not to take pictures. Etc.
Heck, you think broadcast TV shows aren't copyrighted?
> If you want to enforce restrictions then make
> it impossible for people to see until they have agreed to your terms and
> conditions.
That would be license law, not copyright law. That's not even the same
jurisdiction in the USA.
> (this includes agreeing not using any photos or videos for commercial
> purposes).
I don't know if you can copyright a car race, so that can be different.
--
Darren New, San Diego CA, USA (PST)
Understanding the structure of the universe
via religion is like understanding the
structure of computers via Tron.
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