Ok. Good, meaty discussion here!!
To be fair, I did not ignore the fact that you were speaking of only two particular collections.
I agreed that you are indeed correct that Getty is committing fraud if what you claim is true.
The topic of this discussion is "Possible reasons for class action suit against Getty in the USA".
Therefore, we came back around to the general discussion of whether or not a non-exclusive licensee has a right to sue.
I think that the answer lies in between both of our assertions as follows from the Silvers vs. Sony Pictures and Eden Toys, Inc. v. Florelee Undergarment Co. cases:
"Pursuant to Section 501(b) of the 1976 Copyright Act... only the legal or beneficial owner of an exclusive right under copyright law is entitled, or has standing, to sue for infringement. Silvers v. Sony Pictures Entm't Inc.... In so holding, the Ninth Circuit followed the Second Circuit’s decision in Eden Toys, Inc. v. Florelee Undergarment Co.,... superseded by rule and statute on other grounds.... Section 106 of the Act defines and limits the exclusive rights under copyright law.... While these exclusive rights may be transferred and owned separately, the assignment of a bare right to sue is ineffectual because it is not one of the exclusive rights.... Since the right to sue is not one of the exclusive rights, transfer solely of the right to sue does not confer standing on the assignee.... One can only obtain a right to sue on a copyright if the party also obtains one of the exclusive rights in the copyright... Further, to obtain a right to sue for past infringement, that right must be expressly stated in the assignment."http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20110614/17302814695/judge-rules-that-righthaven-lawsuit-was-sham-threatens-sanctions.shtmlI say that you are correct in that a simple non-exclusive agreement doesn't provide the licensee the right to sue.
UNLESS one of the exclusive rights in Section 106 is also transferred AS WELL. I think that I am correct in this area.
Referring to the above
"One can only obtain a right to sue on a copyright if the party also obtains one of the exclusive rights in the copyright" (referring to the exclusive rights in Section 106).
It's simply my contention that many of Getty's contracts do in fact have one or more of the Section 106 Exclusive rights transferred, which in turn makes the right to sue a legal possibility.
We were both correct, technically speaking. Perhaps, we can live with that?
Again, I think that you are right about the two collections that you mentioned, provided that Getty has none of the Section 106 exclusive rights in its contract(s).
To answer Khan's question of why there aren't tons of lawsuits being filed by non-exclusive licensees...
that's because they could only get the "retail price" in court; often 2 to 200 dollars. But, no legal fees.
Those lawsuits aren't worth it. Hence very few lawsuits.
Very good discussion, as usual.
S.G.