Little more than two months after concerns about copyright infringement arose, Pinterest announced it is introducing a new feature to credit photographers, artists and creators of other content its users “pin” on the virtual scrapbook, but legal experts were divided yesterday about whether that is enough to protect the website from liability.
The new feature ensures that content from Flickr, Behance, Vimeo and YouTube receives clear attribution under the description of each pin, even if it’s taken from a third-party site, Pinterest said in a statement. The attribution cannot be edited and includes a permanent link to the work, its creator and where the content is hosted.
But Martin O’Donnell, a Boston attorney specializing in copyright law, said merely crediting the creator is not enough.
http://bostonherald.com/business/technology/general/view/20220503copyright_doubts_still_pinned_to_pinterest_despite_changes
The new feature ensures that content from Flickr, Behance, Vimeo and YouTube receives clear attribution under the description of each pin, even if it’s taken from a third-party site, Pinterest said in a statement. The attribution cannot be edited and includes a permanent link to the work, its creator and where the content is hosted.
But Martin O’Donnell, a Boston attorney specializing in copyright law, said merely crediting the creator is not enough.
http://bostonherald.com/business/technology/general/view/20220503copyright_doubts_still_pinned_to_pinterest_despite_changes