After viewing this image of Penelope Umbrico’s work, I do not think this is a misappropriated image. I could understand why people would mistake her work for a misappropriated image because she probably didn’t photograph each image of the sun herself. On the other hand, the composition created by the combination of individual images of the sun composes a greater image. Umbrico uses a variety of suns to create a unified piece of her own. Because these suns are not used for a bad purpose, these individual images makes Umbrico’s image fairly used. I think her work is very clever based on the concept and grid form of the image.
Friday, February 22, 2013
What Do You Think?
After viewing this image of Penelope Umbrico’s work, I do not think this is a misappropriated image. I could understand why people would mistake her work for a misappropriated image because she probably didn’t photograph each image of the sun herself. On the other hand, the composition created by the combination of individual images of the sun composes a greater image. Umbrico uses a variety of suns to create a unified piece of her own. Because these suns are not used for a bad purpose, these individual images makes Umbrico’s image fairly used. I think her work is very clever based on the concept and grid form of the image.
Wednesday, February 20, 2013
Misappropriated Use???
Article: Copyright, fair use and the struggle against online image misappropriation By Jason Schultz
In the
article above, Jason Schultz (blogger of Thoughts On Things click here for the full article) discusses one of
the major issues that many photographers, such as Lane Hartwell, are running
into. The issue is the misappropriation of
their images without the photographer being attributed. Lane Hartwell expressed her anger at the fact
that one of her images was used in a spoof called Here Comes another Bubble by The Richter Scales. The discussion among people is if The
Richter Scales’ video was copyright infringement or not. According to the article, the spoof is not
illegal. The author defends his argument
with facts from the U.S. Copyright law.
I agree
with the author of this article, that Lane Hartwell’s photo in the video was
not copyright infringement. Based on the
U.S. Copyright law, “no one person ever has the absolute rights under the law
to control every use of a copyrighted work.”
Under the Copyright Act, there are four main factors to determine
whether copyrighted work is being used fairly.
These factors are 1) the purpose of the use, 2) whether the original
work was published and/or fictional, 3) the amount of the work taken, and 4) the
potential harm to the market for the original work. With those determinations listed, I think the
law goes in the favor of both the video and Hartwell. In my opinion, if Hartwell wants to avoid frustration
then she should be mindful of cases that will arise with people using her
images without attribution.
Image used above: The Copyright symbol
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