Has anyone actually verified with the US Library of Congress that their infringed image registered by Masterfile as a part of the compilation actually exist on the CD that they submitted as a part of the copyright registration?
I tried to obtain a copy some of their images, and the response from them was that they are not available due to media problems.
They had registered most of their images almost ten years ago. The lifespan of a poor quality CD is 2 years, lifespan of a good quality CD is 5 years. After that period, the CD material disintegrates and the data becomes unreadable. Many of the images on the CDs stored in the US Library of Congress may already be corrupted, or the entire CD may not even be readable. This would make their registered compilation no longer valid because nobody can verify what their registered images look like. In that scenario they may have the freedom to lie what image is registered from a particular artist in the CD compilation, and that would put their claims in great doubt and therefore invalid. All of their registrations seem to be in a digital form only.
It is worth verifying if you can actually see the infringed image in the US Library of Congress. If they can't find it because the CD is corrupted and is not possible to view the image, their registration would be invalid. Who knows, the image may not even be on the CD at all.
I tried to obtain a copy some of their images, and the response from them was that they are not available due to media problems.
They had registered most of their images almost ten years ago. The lifespan of a poor quality CD is 2 years, lifespan of a good quality CD is 5 years. After that period, the CD material disintegrates and the data becomes unreadable. Many of the images on the CDs stored in the US Library of Congress may already be corrupted, or the entire CD may not even be readable. This would make their registered compilation no longer valid because nobody can verify what their registered images look like. In that scenario they may have the freedom to lie what image is registered from a particular artist in the CD compilation, and that would put their claims in great doubt and therefore invalid. All of their registrations seem to be in a digital form only.
It is worth verifying if you can actually see the infringed image in the US Library of Congress. If they can't find it because the CD is corrupted and is not possible to view the image, their registration would be invalid. Who knows, the image may not even be on the CD at all.