If A Video Is Filmed By Chimps... Who Owns The Copyright?
from the for-you-lawyers dept
Here's a fun one for you lawyers out there. Richard points us to a story about a movie made entirely by chimpanzees who were given cameras, which is now being broadcast on the BBC. However, Richard raises a good question: who owns the copyright on the film. Generally speaking (and, yes, there are some exceptions), whoever creates the actual work gets the copyright, and it seems clear that the chimps specifically learned to pay attention to the viewfinder on the camera. Of course, with films and such, there may be more contractual issues set up, but I doubt the chimps signed anything. Perhaps it's a work-for-hire situation, even if the chimps weren't paid? Though, according to some, if the chimps aren't paid, they won't have incentive to make any new movies...Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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Filed Under: chimpanzees, copyright, video
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Hmm...
*not a lawyer by any stretch of the imagination*
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Re: Hmm...
I'm sure that the owners will posit that it's a 'work for hire' (and claim that the normal care and feeding are their 'wages') but I rather like the idea that a chimp's work belongs to public domain. At least until they get to vote!
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Re: Re: Hmm...
You say that like might be a bad thing, compared to some people who can (and do) vote, chimps would be a major improvement
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Re: Re: Re: Hmm...
Well, at least it'd be random. So, yeah, they'd have us beat.
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Re: Re: Hmm...
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Re: Hmm...
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Re: Re: Hmm...
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Re: Re: Re: Hmm...
What if it's a wild chimp? And the camera is shaped like a banana? And the banana camera was dropped in the forest by another wild animal? And the video feed was transmitted to a computer that had no owner and then uploaded to YouTube?
Well, the average quality of youtube videos would go up.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Hmm...
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Re: Re: Hmm...
I think it is irrelevant whether or not the chimp can have IP rights. The question is only whether the chimp is an "author". I am not aware of authority defining "author" (except in the "works made for hire" jurisprudence, which I take to be irrelevant,) but I'd wager a court would hold that a chimp isn't one.
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Corporations
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Re: Corporations
It really shouldn't be "that hard" for you to provide a legal citation to support your claim then.
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Re: Re: Corporations
One possible exception is granting ownership of a copyright, such as in a will or other instrument, to a trust that is managed for the sake of an animal. However, that is an entirely different beast.
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Re: Re: Re: Corporations
Actually, you ask one to, they could: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Principia_Mathematica
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Re: Re: Re: Corporations
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Re: Corporations
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Re: Re: Corporations
Citation, please.
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Re: Corporations
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Re: Re: Corporations
Anyhow, for better or worse the animals here are likely instrumentalities of the producer, who retains the rights.
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I've asked this question before...
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chimps make movies in hollywood all the time....
Chimps never own the copyright, regardless of whether the 'chimp' in question is literal or figurative.
But, if the chimp wonders into the woods, finds a camera, gathers the crew and cast and then makes the movie and walks away...I suppose it would be up for grabs. Or at least until that chimp logged onto their YouTube account, saw the video being uploaded and sued for a piece of the, er, well...banana pie!
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Re: chimps make movies in hollywood all the time....
Only in the case of a "work for hire". I'd like to see the contract you think these chimps signed.
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Like other robots that make things. Uh-oh!
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Re:
So is a human.
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Children
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Re: Children
For that matter, what about the copyright of the minor children themselves? After all, the parents created the children and copyright is automatically granted upon creation...
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Re: Re: Children
Are the children's children then derivative works?
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As for the individual, unedited clips, likely no one.
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First owner = author = not chimp
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Re: First owner = author = not chimp
I noticed you didn't cite any authoritative source for your "quote".
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Re: Re: First owner = author = not chimp
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Okay, off topic, I know, but I couldn't resist.
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Hail!
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Chimps aren't so stupid
It wasn't until quite late in mankind's cultural and technological development (achieved through a process of continuous improvement aka copying) at the dawn of the industrial revolution, that some unprincipled legislators were given enough backhanders that they created the monopolies of copyright and patent (on the galling pretext they would advance mankind's progress).
And now all we can do is engage in this depressing doublespeak that copyright is of course most worthy, but in an inexhaustible number of cases, a complete fucking joke.
It is copyright that is making monkeys out of us all.
Abolish it.
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Re: Chimps aren't so stupid
"Unlike humans, chimps aren't so stupid as to create laws that prevent them copying each other."
actually read
"Unlike humans, chimps aren't so stupid as to create laws that prevent them from APEing each other."
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Re: Re: Chimps aren't so stupid
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Re: Re: Chimps aren't so stupid
Human sue.
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I don't know, perhaps the chimps were given names and they were taught how to sign their names and were commanded to sign their names on the dotted line if they were given a cookie. It's possible. The question is, did the chimps understand what they were signing or that they were signing a contract or were they just repeating a procedure that they were trained to repeat.
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Was the music made by the chimps too? Wow, evolution at work :)
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Re:
Err, just exactly which "rights" are you referring to?
they're actions can be considered either completely random or programmed in some way.
In which case there is no "creative element" and the work is not eligible for copyright under US law. So again I ask, to which "rights" are you referring?
If an animal is thought of as a software program that creates art explicitly through human training (ie programming) then the trainers (ie programmers) would receive most of the credit, followed by a smaller proportion of credit going to anyone who had a hand in the creative works.
OK, now I see that you're just making stuff up. Copyright does not work on percentages like that.
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It's not hard to figure out who owns the copyright, unless you are trying to be obtuse.
Strap a camera to your dog, turn on record, and let him wander around. You own the video. NEXT.
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Re:
Ah, so if I own a camera, then I own the copyright on anything made with it, huh?
Who gave permission for them to do this sort of thing?
And if I give someone permission to photograph something, then I own the copyright on the resulting work too, eh?
It's not hard to figure out who owns the copyright, unless you are trying to be obtuse.
With the legal theories you've presented so far, you seem to be trying to be "an idiot".
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Re: Re:
Go back to your school work.
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Re: Re: Re:
And if the Chimps are wild, who owns them? NO ONE! Yay! So who owns the copyright? Logically....? NO ONE!
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Re: Re:
>> And if I give someone permission to photograph something ..
If I _own_ someone, all things that he/she/it produce are mine. Slaves do not own the product. The master does.
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Re: Re: Re:
Who says? That actually doesn't seem to matter at all without a legal basis.
If I _own_ someone, all things that he/she/it produce are mine. Slaves do not own the product. The master does.
If you'd care to point the part part of copyright law that assigns copyright to a slave's owner, I'd like to read it.
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Re:
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Re:
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Re:
1) The Zoo owns the chimps
2) A trainer taught them to use the camera
3) A film producer created the idea
Which one owns the copyright?
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Re:
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Re: Re:
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Re: Re: Re:
So actually, both monkeys and humans are born with the natural right to copy each other. It's just that we're stupid enough to allow ourselves to be brainwashed into believing that copying each other is not only morally wrong but detrimental to mankind's progress.
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Re:
I can't see how you would believe the rights would go to anyone other than the animal (or nobody) if:
1. It has free will in pointing the camera, and intentionally points it at things.
2. It hasn't deliberately signed over the rights to its creation.
The issue that we're running into is that chimps aren't total idiots. They're not robots and they're not obedient dogs; they were deliberately pointing the camera at things.
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Re: The Anti-Mike
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You mean human camera operators aren't mildly evolved chimps already?
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video is filmed every day in hollywood by...chimps
haha
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perhaps...
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Re: perhaps...
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There might be related precedent ...
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Well, either that or the camera, I'm not sure which.
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It was made by the BCC but the BCC isn't a private company. It's a government-owned institution and technically, everything they produce belongs to the British people. So, the British people own the copyrights and apparently, they're free to share it with other British people.
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The Answer
TAM is wrong - it isn't like strapping a camera on your dog - because the trainers are deliberately making every effort NOT to influence the film contents.
When you look at what the trainers were trying to do (and ignore the amusing but legally dubious idea that the chimps could own the copyright themselves) it is clear that the raw films are experimental data and therefore fall immediately into the public domain.
The edited films are copyright the editor (and of course the music has its own copyright) - similar to a table of results in an academic journal - where the numbers are PD but the layout isn't.
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Re: The Answer
Nice analysis.
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As far as minors are concerned...taken from copyright.gov
Can a minor claim copyright?
Minors may claim copyright, and the Copyright Office issues registrations to minors, but state laws may regulate the business dealings involving copyrights owned by minors. For information on relevant state laws, consult an attorney.
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Re:
The difference is in the intent of the people who organised this experiment.
If you strap a camera on an animal as an experiment in avante gard art then you own a copyright. If you do it as part of an experiment in animal behaviour then it is not a creative work at all but lab results - and therefore part of the public domain.
Its exactly the same as Jackson Pollock's random paint splashings - which are art because he says so - as opposed to the random splashings of a paint manufacturer researching the properties of paint - which are public domain.
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Who cares..
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This MONKEY Business has to stop!!
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Whoever owns the chimps
Mike - just stick to the legitimate issues and don't risk soiling your integrity with articles like this.
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Re: Whoever owns the chimps
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Legality
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Re: Legality
If the exact same thing were done as an artistic exercise then the products would be copyright - but since it's science a different set of rules applies.
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Re: Re: Legality
The difference is, here the individuals shooting footage are likely not "authors" under the copyright law. So no copyright vested in them upon creation. The "authors" are likely the researchers.
Incidentally, I do not think that intention matters. The reason raw experimental data passes into the public domain is not because the researcher has no creative intent, it is because the data has no creative content (and, thus, is not an appropriate subject matter for copyright). Certainly the creative and original interpretation of the data is subject to copyright. Here (arguably), the raw experimental data is a list of things at which chimps pointed cameras, not the recording of what they saw when they did so.
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Re: Re: Re: Legality
If the chimps were replaced by humans then consent forms would have to be signed - which would clarify the copyright status.
The "authors" may be the researchers - but as a work of science their activity does not fall into the categories that are protected by copyright - in a way it isn't even public domain - (that would imply that copyright was possible) It's simply "not applicable".
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If they were being compensated in any other way, such as getting lots of nice things to eat in exchange for their participation, then it could qualify as a work for hire, and would still would not be able to claim ownership of the work.
Either way, copyright does not get assigned to the chimpanzees.
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Does copyright only apply to humans?
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Re: Does copyright only apply to humans?
Based on DNA and cell count due to microbial colonization, most so-called "humans" are mostly non-human. So do they still have rights to copyright? Don't forget that these microbes can also influence thought and thus the creative process.
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who can we sue then...
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universal copyright?
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Re:
Unsubstantiated statement.
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Monkeys
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Monkey
Anyway, some people say we evolved from monkeys so maybe the siblings of the siblings of the siblings etc, etc, etc, will some day evolve and they will own the copyrights to the film their ancestors made. Just a thought
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Copyright
Now...in America, the Government CANNOT own Copy, that fact is spelled out explicitly under US Copyright Law. Any monkeys residing any form of government-controlled zoo or shelter, including state and manciple zoos, would AUTOMATICALLY enter into the Public Domain, no questions asked, and no argument possible.
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