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Legal Controversies Forum / Re: Some basic copyright questions to discuss
« on: February 09, 2017, 06:58:38 PM »Quote
so yes you could take a picture of that iconic image, own the copyright of "your" image, and also sell that image if you so choose too.
So let's say person A goes to the Louvre and makes a photograph of the Mona Lisa and sells posters of it. Person B buys one of these posters and sees that he might make some money with that idea as well. So he goes to the Louvre and takes a photograph himself and then sells posters of his own photograph. All 3 pictures look the same (the painting, A's and B's photograph).
Why is B not infringing A's copyright? B had access to A's picture and there is a striking similarity or let's even say that there are some minor differences in lightning etc. (because it doesn't make a difference if there are some minor differences).
Ok let's get that question 1) aside. I know I take a lot of your time, so I dont want to insist on getting answers on my other questions. But what would really interest me (and gladly it's not an academic question, so it should be easy to anwer with not much space for dispute) is my question number 3) I just post it here again
I know that getty allows people to embed a lot of their pictures (although not in the original size, which strangely doesn't seem to be a problem to anyone using that function.) To me getty didn't really make their pictures free with these minipictures...
But what I am missing is information about private use of pictures, meaning that I just want a getty picture to store on my PC and look at it from time to time. I don't want to upload it to a webpage and therewith make it vulnerable to copyright infringement by others, nor do I want to use it commercially. Sure I can browse a lot of websites to download full-size getty pictures from companies that have licenced some pictures, but what I'm missing is a relatively inexpensive alternative to commercial and also 'non-commercial but vulnerable to infringement use'. Does that exist? I have not found that question anywhere, which seems strange to me. I think there are a lot of people who just want to have some good quality images for purely private use.
Reading it again, I guess I could just contact getty. But maybe someone knows if this sort of licence I'm looking for is just not a common thing to offer for stock photo agencies.