What Robert says. I can sell images in the public domain all I want, the problem is with licenses.
(I will likely do something more than just sell a digital copy, because it's unlikely someone will buy them from me if it's digital form and I offer customers nothing else for their money - after all they'll just find a competitor who offers it for free. Most decent businesses will add value to the offer, like make a t-shirt embedding the image or a
nice print and sell the object. I could try to sell without adding anything, or maybe in a special format that you want [like a Google Play book], I'm not in the wrong
as long as I'm truthful. A willing buyer and a willing seller can made a transaction over a public domain image, if they so like. As long as no one was fooled.)
What I cannot do, is come to you and lie to you that I own the copyright when I know I don't. I shouldn't make you buy a "license" to those imaginary "copyrights", or worse, make you pay a settlement under pain of infringement of "rights" I know I don't have. Doesn't that strike you as fraudulent behavior? It does to me.
Getty
denied in their memo to the court that they claim "copyright" or "intellectual property rights" over photos they knew in the public domain. Smart, Getty - it knew it can't tell the court it somehow has copyrights out of thin air. But Getty
does claim intellectual property rights, this point just sounds like a lie.
Even, Getty had the nerve to actually say: (same memo)
At most, Plaintiffs allege a risk of consumer confusion: that Getty Images held “itself out falsely as the agent of Ms. Highsmith” and that, as a result, a consumer might believe she must buy a license from Getty Images to use a Highsmith Photo when, in fact, she could obtain a copy of the photo for free from the Library of Congress (albeit without the functionality and other benefits provided by Getty Images). However, allegations of consumer confusion do not rise to “a specific and substantial injury to the public interest” and therefore are insufficient to state a claim under Section 349.
If the harm to the public wasn't alleged enough, the next amended complaint can do it. I'm confident it can easily be.
So, Getty says "oh you got confused and thought you must pay? such a shame, but we didn't do anything wrong by confusing you intently".
This makes me mad. I'd think unfair and deceptive practices can be added against them, only for this, and FTC might be interested.