Guy Who Took Walter Scott Shooting Video Now Demanding To Be Paid; Everyone Gets Confused About Fair Use
from the let's-take-this-slowly... dept
As you probably heard, last week there was a big story involvingWell... that is until a copyright angle was added to the story. You see, the guy who actually shot the video, Feidin Santana, has apparently hired a publicist who is demanding news stations pay up for showing the video. And yes, news stations are playing the video so often that it's become a Jon Stewart punchline. Sanata had initially been anonymous, and claimed that he was worried about retribution, but since coming forward has apparently decided that he might as well cash in.
The publicist who is apparently going around trying to charge for this (one assumes after being retained by Santana) has some interesting views on how this all works:
“It’s been allowed to be used for free for over a week now,” Max Markson, CEO of the Sydney-based Markson Sparks group, told the Daily News.But there's a big problem with this plan, and that is known as "fair use." News reporting is one of the fundamental parts of fair use. Unfortunately, the reporter from the NY Times, Frances Robles, seems to have very little knowledge about fair use and relied on a ridiculously biased expert to argue otherwise. She spoke with Frederic Haber of the Copyright Clearance Center, an organization that goes around trying to license everything and is fundamentally against fair use. And yet, Robles insisted that "copyright experts agree" that fair use somehow no longer applies:
“Now it’s going to be licensed and now you have to pay for it.”
Copyright experts agreed that although news agencies are allowed to use even copyrighted material under what is called “fair use” clauses in the law that time period has passed.Many actual copyright experts challenged Robles about this issue on Twitter, and she insists she spoke to two others besides Haber and they all agreed, though when questioned, she refused to name who those copyright experts were. And that's a problem, because all three of those copyright experts -- assuming Robles actually found three -- are wrong. There is no "time limit" element to fair use. At best someone might try to argue that after a certain period of time the piece was no longer newsworthy and thus fair use no longer applied, but that seems like a huge stretch.
There is no fair use in Australia, so perhaps that's why Markson is so confused. Take, for example, the nonsensical statement he gave Buzzfeed:
“Fair usage for video exists and networks can still use it for a certain amount of time,” Markson further explained, “like with footage from the Olympics, but the fair usage fee is for people who want to use it again. And in the lead-up to the trial we expect there will be more requests for licensing.”This makes no sense. There is no such thing as a "fair usage fee." Markson doesn't seem to have any idea how fair use works, and it's unfortunate that the NY Times report that many people are basing their own reporting on isn't any better.
There is plenty of case law that I'm sure any real "copyright expert" would have passed along to Robles had she asked them. Hell, just last year there was a good fair use ruling saying that Bloomberg was allowed to distribute a recording of Swatch's investor calls. The idea that time does away with fair use doesn't make much sense. There's a 1968 case in which Time Life sued Random House and others claiming that using stills from the famed Zapruder film of President Kennedy's assassination was infringing, but the court found it to be fair use, despite it happening years after the film was made (rather than weeks in the case of the Walter Scott video). Then there's the case involving video footage of the beating of Reginald Denny, in which the videographers sued CBS over their use and distribution of the footage (including that it was briefly broadcast on Court TV). Here again, courts found the use to be fair use noting:
We conclude that each factor, particularly the nature of the copyrighted work, weighs in favor of fair use except the substantiality of the use, which we treat as neutral. Accordingly, we agree with the district court that Court TV's use was protected, and we affirm the grant of summary judgment in its favor.So it seems rather difficult to see how fair use magically disappeared, no matter what Frederic Haber or the mysterious other two "copyright experts" told Robles.
“At some point it’s not newsworthy anymore and you are using it for commercial benefit,” said Frederic Haber, a vice president and general counsel of the Copyright Clearance Center, a collective licensing organization that works on behalf of copyright holders such as The New York Times. The issue could change once the video is played in court during a trial, he said.Robles later also seems more confused about how copyright works in suggesting that because Walter Scott's family gave the NY Times the video, it wouldn't be subject to these demands for payment:
The Times has used the video with the family’s permission and not received a cease and desist letter.That sounds good but is meaningless. The Scott family doesn't have the copyright on the video. Santana does. They have no right to license it and the NY Times is clearly relying on fair use in its presentation as well.
Unfortunately, because most reporters don't really want to bother to understand the issue, many took the NY Times report and ran with it, insisting that, yes, media outlets now have to pay to continue using the video. Even the Poynter Institute, which should know better, ran with a headline saying that the "media must pay" to continue using the video. The article itself at least discusses the fair use issue, but the headline seems to ignore that.
I'm guessing that many big news organizations will just pay up, because it's cheaper than fighting, but they have every right to fight this attempt to undermine fair use. The video is newsworthy and its use in reporting is the kind of quintessential example of fair use that is often used to show how fair use works.
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Filed Under: copyright, fair use, feidin santana, max markson, michael slager, news coverage, newsworthy, police, shooting, walter scott
Companies: markson sparks
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If It's NEWS then it's fair use
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I'm kindof on this guys side.
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And while it may suck for him, I personally hope the various news agencies tell him to get bent when his lawyer comes demanding cash, as Fair Use already gets attacked enough in other arenas, it doesn't need weakened in a case this obvious by them folding and acting like Fair Use doesn't include newsworthy items.
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Re: I'm kindof on this guys side.
Copyright is supposed benefit the general public, not the copyright holder. Allowing fair use for news commentary benefits the general public, not to mention that copyright law was in no way an incentive to create this particular video.
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Just imagine . . .
Police departments everywhere could pay a camera wielding citizen $500 to get that evidence of wrongdoing before anyone can use it against the police officer and the department. Citizens make money! It's commerce!
Isn't it in the public and taxpayer best interest to maintain the respect that public holds for the police?
(ewwww! I almost gaged typing that. Now I need a shower.)
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JFK's assassination was newsworthy, and Zapruder made some money off his video despite a much more open concept of "fair use" at the time.
Frankly, that the news organizations that would rape your daughter for re-broadcasting their footage (fair use, posh!) feel outright astonished they can't use someone elses for free.
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On the other hand, Feidin Santana distributed the footage without selling it. Now he is, after the fact, demanding recompense for his own distribution.
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Why would you expect them to follow this law when they could just break more laws and beat up/arrest/seize the evidence of their previous crimes caught on film
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But any other news organization could then include it in their broadcast as fair use. They just wouldn't have the scoop -- which it seems, is what news organizations will pay you for.
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That's a perfectly fair position, but it's different from stating that the law requires them to pay him, which is what this is about.
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"North Carolina"
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I sort of wonder if it should be copyrighted at all
According to the letter of the law, it is almost certainly covered, but let's take a step back here.
Copyright does not cover ideas or facts, only the artistic contributions of the author/photographer/etc for the express purpose of encouraging more art.
But one has to ask, in this scenario, what artistic choices did Santana contribute? This was a spontaneous event. He didn't set up the camera angles, the lighting, or direct the participants. He was just in the right place at the wrong time.
Why does any spontaneous recording of a factual event, with no contribution from the recorder (other than the ability to push 'start') qualify for a purely economic right?
[Hell, if you want to get really anal about it, NC is a one-party consent state. If he didn't have consent to record people in public, maybe the recording itself is in a gray area. I think we could all agree that it shouldn't be, but if he wants to go legal with this, that opens up more potential liabilities than just for news stations.]
I don't see this as the same as a photographer getting just the right angle, or waiting for just the right framing or lighting conditions for their subject. If he had even done more narrating of the events than "Oh shit, oh shit" I'd be more sympathetic to his contributions.
Everything you see on that video is a practical necessity of making any recording of that factual event.
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Public Recordings
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Not really - photojournalists can either be on staff, or they can offer to sell their unpublished photos to a news organization. If the photographer hasn't published them anywhere, the only place the news org can get them is from the photographer. Copyright isn't even necessary to make that kind of deal work.
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If you rely on the news agencies to have a photojournalist on staff, then you create a massive free rider problem. (since every other news agency can use the photo that the news agency paid to have a photographer take).
Having a freelance photo journalist sell their unpublished photo to a news agency creates a different, but related, problem. It increases the price that the photo journalist has to charge for the photo (since they can only sell it once) while simultaneously decreasing the value of the photo to the news agency that buys it (since, as soon as they publish it, all the other agencies that didn't pay for the photo can use it under fair use).
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Is there actually a problem that needs to be fixed?
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And is that something that is happening? Or are you speculating about what might happen if fair use were strengthened?
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"My opinion would be that any recording in public that is for a surveillance/news/legal purpose should be considered public domain regardless of the entity doing the recording. Citizen, Business, or Government."
I was arguing that that rule would have negative consequences for photo journalists. I don't have a problem with strengthening fair use, I just think that this particular change would have negative consequences.
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Creative Work?
Maybe the corrupt policeman Michael Slager could make such a claim. He set up a scene where he shot an unarmed man in the back running away from him. He then creatively planted false evidence, and invented a false public-relations narrative about administering CPR (which he did not) for the police report.
He created the set, wrote the fictitious script, provided props to make his version of the scene more credible, and was one of the two main actors in the scene. This was creative. Does such creativity deserve a government-granted monopoly on his totally-dishonest but imaginative story?
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All this to say that the use of a video clip is not fair simply because the content of the video is newsworthy.
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"Although KCAL apparently ran its own voice-over, it does not appear to have added anything new or transformative to what made the LANS work valuable--a clear, visual recording of the beating itself."
I think that the Walter Scott case is different, since, unlike the KCAL case (which concerned a video taken by a couple that specialized in documenting newsworthy events from a helicopter, in order to sell the footage later), Mr. Santana is not a professional photo/video journalist, and so it is less clear what, in copyright terms, the "purpose" of the video was.
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We actually discuss a *later* ruling concerning the Reginald Denny video (and how Court TV used it) in the article above, noting that the appeals court found it to be fair use.
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One thing I would point out is that in the CourtTV case the 9th Circuit actually points out that CourtTV was not using the footage to report the news, they were using it to promote their coverage of the trail of the perpetrators of the beating. Since this promotional purpose is different from the original purpose of the video, CourtTV's use was considered "transformative" in the language of fair use, and newsworthiness wasn't one of the factors the court considered.
To be clear, I am not saying that broadcasting the video of the Walter Scott shooting is not fair use. I am just cautioning against a blanket rule that says that if something is newsworthy, it can be aired without consequence.
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Instead I use Ageless addon for Firefox.
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I find it disheartening to watch Mr. Santana go from a good hearted citizen trying to do the right thing, to a money grabbing copyright troll trying to profit off Walter Scott's murder.
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