Just some clarifications. An image HAS to be registered before the copyright holder can sue you in court. But just to be clear, if you are infringing on an unregistered image, all the copyright holder has to do is register the image and file suite, but only for actual damages (see below *). I think that generally they dont even bother registering them (if theyre not already registered) during the demand letter stage ... they only bother with that if and when they decide to go to court.
*If it was registered before you started infringing, then he can get statutory damages and his legal fees. The registration grace period, as I understand it, allows the photographer to register his image withing 3 months of publication and still have the same options as if it were registered since publication. If its been 3 months or more since first publication (by the copyright holder) and the image isnt registered there is no way to recover statutory damages and legal fees .... only actual damages.
Its worth noting on registered images, if the infringment can be shown to be unwillfull then the judge is allowed (not required) to lower statutory damages to $200 per infringement.
I know ... clear as mud.
*If it was registered before you started infringing, then he can get statutory damages and his legal fees. The registration grace period, as I understand it, allows the photographer to register his image withing 3 months of publication and still have the same options as if it were registered since publication. If its been 3 months or more since first publication (by the copyright holder) and the image isnt registered there is no way to recover statutory damages and legal fees .... only actual damages.
Its worth noting on registered images, if the infringment can be shown to be unwillfull then the judge is allowed (not required) to lower statutory damages to $200 per infringement.
I know ... clear as mud.
Copyright exists from the moment the picture is taken and belongs to the photographer. The photog can come after you even if the image is not registered but only for actual damages. Registering the image allows me to seek statutory damages the up to 150,000 the demand letters like to quote per image.
I believe there is also a clause in there that says if I find you are infringing I have 3 months from the date I find the infringement to register the image and can then still get statutory damages. The ones Getty are registering now are outside the 3 month window and Getty is only seeking actual damages on those pics.I have a question that nobody may have thought about. Since the majority of images that Getty claims to own or manage do not have a registered copyright, what would happen if a victim of the Getty Scam were to register the alleged infringement image themselves and then claim Getty is the infringer? What a twist.