Monthly Archives: March 2013

Disney Sued for Copyright Infringement

In this recent case, Disney was accused of copyright infringement for using the idea of dog faces with signatures as a tshirt.  There was an original drawing by a design company with the same idea and the original creator thought that Disney stole this conception.  Initially reading the article, I thought Disney was careful about their “copy” and tried to made sure none of the dog faces or signatures were identical.  If this were true, Disney would probably win the case because copyright protects, ” “idea/expression” dichotomy in copyright law, which is supposed to mean that you only protect the specific and defined expression — not the general idea.”  But after this article was posted, commenters reading the article actually pointed out numerous faces that seemed to be copied from the original.  21/27 faces on Disney’s copy were similar to the original.  The question now is: Can disney be accused of copyright infringement for copying these dogs faces, even though the faces symbolize exclusive breeds that have those types of faces naturally?  Disney symbolizes imagination, creativity, and make-believe.  But did they actually imagine and create this idea? or is it all make-believe?

Obama- style Poster Maker…

My group is using the Fairey vs. Associated Press court case for our second portfolio paper.  In this case, the artist Shepard Fairey, the creator of the iconic “Hope” Obama poster, is accused of copying the photograph taken by an AP photographer. When I was doing research for this essay I stumbled upon multiple sites titled “Obama Poster Maker”. These sites enable anyone to upload photographs and digital produce them in the style of Fairey’s poster. How does copyright law deal with this? Does Fairey own this technique or is it just an ability anyone with Photoshop or googling skills can freely apply to any photograph?

TACO BELL!

Taco Bell has a very popular Doritos Loco Taco. This translates to “Dorito Crazy Taco” which means that the taco is a crazy taco that is made out of Doritos. Here is a link to the picture of it. If you look at the logo, you will see that there is a Trademark symbol next to the word “Doritos”. This is because Taco Bell does not own the rights to the word “Doritos”.  Every taco that Taco Bell sells, multiple companies will make a percentage of a profit off of it; Taco Bell will make money because they are the business selling the tacos, and Frito-Lays (the company that makes the Doritos) will make some money because Taco Bell is using their chip as the taco shell.  If you rinse all of the seasoning of a Doritos taco shell off, does that void the agreement between Frito-Lays and Taco Bell? Because technically without the seasoning, the taco shell wouldn’t be a Dorito.

The Cat NOT in the the Hat! A Parody?

The parody book “The Cat NOT in the Hat! A Parody” by Dr. Juice used Suess- like rhymes and illustrations to tell the story of O.J. Simpson’s double murder trial. The book depicts O.J. Simpson, wearing the Cat in the Hat’s distinctive red and white striped stove-pipe hat, and holding a bloody glove. An example of a line from the book: “One knife?/Two knife?/Red knife/Dead wife.”

Parody falls under fair- use according to the Copyright Act. However, what defines parody? According to the book, “Mass Media Law”, parody must “reflect the content of the original work not just the style or method of presentation”(523). In fact, Dr. Suess Enterprise sued because they did not believe that Dr. Suess’ image should be allowed to be commingled with a murder trial. Penguin book lost the trial because the court found that it was more a parody of the O.J. Simpson trial that used Suess’ shtick.

http://www.imaginelaw.com/lawyer-attorney-1181191.htmlThe disputed work

Posters for President

I made posters for my brother when he was in middle school when he was running for student government president and I thought of a campaign to incorporate his name into well known logos and slogans. He didn’t make any money off of these posters, but he gained recognition by his peers for having cool posters that people can recognize. I may have violated copyright laws by making these posters by using other people’s intellectual property, but I think it was okay because it was my idea to use those logos and think of an artistic way to incorporate his name into them.  Since no one made any money, it was purely an art project that benefited my brother. Do you think that companies would be angry that I did this? I don’t think they will because I don’t mean anything to them and I didn’t make millions of dollars off of my alternate designs of their logos.

You Don’t have to sue over copyrights

Jack Daniels (yeah the whiskey) Doesn’t sue over copyright violations. This seems to go so far against the norm of what we have been discussing in class since it would seem that infringement earns the guilty party an immediate lawsuit, especially in the American legal system whee lawyers are looking to establish clearer copyright precedents by pushing their cases as far as they will go.

Instead Jack Daniels writes a kind and polite letter letting the guilty party know that they are in violation and a request is made for the guilty party to change whatever they are doing. Here is an example in which a politician used his name on a logo similar to the Jack Daniels logo. Jack Daniels requested he change the logo when the book was reprinted and even offered monetary assistance if he wished to change the logo in violation sooner rather than at reprinting.

additional reading

When I approached Professor Sikand to ask her to speak at our brown bag tomorrow and mentioned the topic was fair use, she gave me a book. The book in question was a textbook for the Capstone students (a requirement for the FAMS major, similar to a senior research project in psych). While I forget the exact title the book was an easy read and only took about an hour or two of sporadic attention.

what was notable was the level to which a filmmaker in today’s lawsuit copyright culture must be aware of their surroundings. A simple TV or Computer at the edge of a frame may end up costing thousands in lawsuits. Additionally as a hypothetical say you wanted to do a documentary about street musicians in NYC, unless they wrote their own original songs you would need to get permission to use the copyrighted material (as would the musicians themselves). As my previous post on Tom Waits Mentions, the legal precedent for impersonation is that it is infringement. However due to the fair use policy because you as a filmmaker are not intending to profit off of the song directly and are using only a portion of the song as a portion of a much larger project, Fair use kicks in and you are good to go from a legal standpoint.

Impersonation; Not ok

So I’m a big Tom Waits fan and he is to say the least fiercely against having his music used in advertising, to quote his wikipedia page: “Apparently, the highest compliment our culture grants artists nowadays is to be in an ad — ideally, naked and purring on the hood of a new car”, he said in a statement, referring to the Mercury Cougar. “I have adamantly and repeatedly refused this dubious honor.”

Furthermore, Tom Waits took it a step further and when a company asked him to preform for one of their adverts he refused, The company then hired an impersonator to play the song. Waits sued and won.

If we look however at the reading we have done recently this falls in accordance more with the french system of copyright law, in which the rights to the work belong to the author and are at the author’s discretion to claim infringement.

 

 

Textbooks Are Rip-Offs

On tuesday the Supreme Court decided to through “out a copyright infringement award to publisher John Wiley & Sonsagainst Thai graduate student Supap Kirtsaeng”, who had been using the internet to resell textbooks bought oversees by his relatives at bargain prices. What does this verdict say about copyright in America? How can textbooks be bought so cheaply in other countries and be priced so high in our own?

Twitter Photo Case

Continuing with the social media theme, I just came across this article from January of this year. The article discusses a copyright case between a twitter user and news outlets.  According to the article, this user posted a picture on twitter which some news outlets later published. The judge found that the news outlets were wrong in publishing the pictures because  “Twitter’s terms of service did not give the news agency a license to publish the images without Morel’s permission.” While Twitter may allow for the retweeting of pictures, it does not allow for the commercial publishing of them, as said in its terms of use.  With social media use increasing, copyright infringement is becoming more complicated. What do you think?