Photographer Sues News Agency For Embedding A Tweet Containing His Photo

from the #Doesn'tUnderstandTwitter dept

A lawsuit filed against a news website over an embedded tweet sounds an awful lot like the vindictive, moronic move of someone who thought complaining about a perfectly legal action would somehow result in an instant cash payment.

A lawsuit in the United Kingdom is raising questions about fair use and copyright laws after a freelance photographer sued a news publication for embedding a tweet within an article. Eddie Mitchell, a freelance photographer, is taking Sky News to court after the publication used a tweet containing his photo within an article. Mitchell gave permission to the original tweeter, the Station 43 Midhurst Fire Department, but said the news organization did not have permission to use the photo.

The news organization defended its actions (even though it really didn't need to) by pointing out it had only embedded a tweet from a government agency, assuming the rights to the photo belonged to the fire department. When notified this wasn't the case, the tweet was immediately removed from the story.

Embedding a tweet shouldn't trigger a courtroom debate over fair use or copyright law. (And, despite this article's belief otherwise, there are no "fair use" protections to be discussed in the UK. The UK has "fair dealing," which is somewhat the same, but contains fewer protections than the American version.) A public tweet is fair game for any news organization, no matter what it contains. If someone is tweeting out another person's intellectual property (photo, video, etc.), the onus is on the person tweeting this to ensure the legitimacy of the content's origin.

Embedding a tweet should raise no further legal issues than simply retweeting a tweet. No one needs to ask anyone's permission to retweet a tweet. Embedding a tweet shows everything contained in the original tweet, including the originating account and any activity related to the tweet. It changes nothing and, in fact, does not completely reside on the page where it's embedded. At no time does the content included in the tweet change hands. It's never in possession of the entity that embeds the tweet, not even as a temporary file. If the original use -- the fire department's tweet -- wasn't infringing, embedding the fire department's tweet at another site doesn't magically change it into infringement.

And yet, we have a lawsuit -- and the potential, however small, for the court to side with someone who's clearly in the wrong. Based on what's been reported, it appears the real issue here is the fact that Sky News didn't immediately turn around and cut the photographer a check.

Sky News immediately removed the tweet in question, but Mitchell is suing because the publication refused to pay for the use of that embedded image.

And from that aggrieved angle come a whole lot of questionable statements by the photographer:

“They did not make any attempt via social media or the services 24/7 control to ask permission to use the said picture/tweet, Sky News took it for granted that all crown pictures are free to use and therefore did.

“If they had asked West Sussex Fire and Rescue control or firefighter who tweeted it, they would have told it was not their copyright to grant such use.”

Once again, no one needs to ask permission before embedding a tweet. And there's no obligation, morally, legally or otherwise, for embedders to perform some sort of IP due diligence before embedding a tweet. The photographer's insistence that he's been wronged appears to be entirely based on his subjective reaction to the chain of events, rather than any legal precedent or UK copyright protections. Despite being asked for comment several times, he's come up with nothing better than Sky News should have asked his permission to embed a tweet from a government account. And by "ask permission," he means "pay up."

It's tough to imagine this lawsuit will go far, even when lobbed into a court system of a nation with slightly different views on intellectual property protections. It makes about as much sense as suing Twitter for allowing third parties to interact with public tweets by retweeting or embedding them. In other words, none. Hopefully the UK court will toss this suit before it becomes a nuisance to Sky News, Twitter, or the general idea of sharing publicly-available social media posts.

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Filed Under: copyright, eddie mitchell, embedding, license, photograph, tweets, uk
Companies: sky news, twitter


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  1. icon
    aerinai (profile), 2 Jun 2017 @ 8:56am

    Do you want blacklisted? Because this is how you get Blacklisted...

    If I were in that industry, I'd make sure to have a list I'd pass around to other new organizations about litigious ass-hats that try and pull this crap. Want to sue me for perfectly legal dealings? Good luck getting a paycheck as a freelance photographer when no one wants to buy from you. Whatever value the picture may have is worth far less than the lawsuit that will be coming once the image is actually used.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  2. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 2 Jun 2017 @ 9:37am

    "How dare you post my publicly displayed tweet?!" This is the most blatant, reprehensible example of a cash-grab I think I've ever seen. Nobody is going to want to associate themselves with him or his photography in the future if this is how he behaves.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  3. This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it
    identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 2 Jun 2017 @ 10:06am

    The constant fear of Techdirt: that someone might be paid for their work, and worse when a large corporation can't use it for free.

    Add in that you say the law is clear, but you fear that a court might be misled into a mistake.

    Classic Techdirt.

    The removal pretty much proves the case. If deriving profit from use, then it's no longer fair to the creator. Best choice is indeed to just write a check whenever someone objects. That's not blackmail as you imply, just the normal cost of doing BUSINESS.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  4. icon
    Roger Strong (profile), 2 Jun 2017 @ 10:17am

    Speaking of Dubious IP Claims...

    Sky News is part of Sky UK, the broadcaster that claims ownership of all things "Sky." They forced Microsoft to rename SkyDrive to OneDrive, because using "Sky" for cloud storage "caused confusion among the public."

    link to this | view in thread ]

  5. icon
    wereisjessicahyde (profile), 2 Jun 2017 @ 10:32am

    Surprised Techdirt hasn't done a piece on Press Gazette

    Press Gazette (linked in the piece above)are currently running a "Duopoly" campaign to stop Google and Facebook "destroying journalism"

    After nearly 2 months the petition (which will be sent to Mark Zuckerberg - because the rest of the internet doesn't exist or something) has 178 signatures. Make of it what you will...

    http://www.pressgazette.co.uk/press-gazette-launches-duopoly-campaign-to-stop-google-and-face book-destroying-journalism/

    link to this | view in thread ]

  6. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 2 Jun 2017 @ 10:53am

    Re: Do you want blacklisted? Because this is how you get Blacklisted...

    Yeah, such blacklisting is ILLEGAL AS HELL, kid.

    I've no idea how you'd expect to live in a country where that's practiced and not run afoul of the power structure yourself. Maybe you think you're safe in the ruling class. If so, it's only by accident of birth, as you've missed what democracy is all about.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  7. icon
    Gary (profile), 2 Jun 2017 @ 11:05am

    Re: The constant fear of Techdirt: that someone might be paid for their work, and worse when a large corporation can't use it for free.

    Fair use can still derive profit, that isn't a magical cutoff.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  8. icon
    JoeCool (profile), 2 Jun 2017 @ 11:10am

    Idiots never see things as they could be

    The idiot looks at this as "lost sales", but seriously, anyone using an embedded image over the original was never going to buy it in the first place. Look at this as it is - FREE ADVERTISING. Some folks who would have otherwise never known about your work may see this and purchase the original. So instead of his work getting free advertising, no HE'S getting free advertising... as a crazy who will sue at the drop of a hat. He took positive free advertising and made it into a negative.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  9. icon
    Roger Strong (profile), 2 Jun 2017 @ 11:16am

    Re: The constant fear of Techdirt: that someone might be paid for their work, and worse when a large corporation can't use it for free.

    Add in that you say the law is clear, but you fear that a court might be misled into a mistake.

    And....? This isn't uncommon. Bad court rulings get overturned - eventually - all the time.

    If deriving profit from use, then it's no longer fair to the creator.

    Late night talk shows commonly poke fun at tweets and video clips from news services and politicians. Should they be required to pay for each instance?

    It would be ridiculous to do so. This is why fair use and fair dealing exist. We accept reasonable limits on how much you can monetize your creation.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  10. icon
    Ninja (profile), 2 Jun 2017 @ 11:29am

    Re: Do you want blacklisted? Because this is how you get Blacklisted...

    These kinds of blacklists already exist in the edges of legality for litigious employees regarding labor laws. They lump legitimate lawsuits with frivolous ones. It would be abused.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  11. icon
    Ninja (profile), 2 Jun 2017 @ 11:30am

    Re: The constant fear of Techdirt: that someone might be paid for their work, and worse when a large corporation can't use it for free.

    They removed upon clarification and they should still pay? Right. ALL OF YOUR MONIES ARE BELONG TO US COPYMORONS! ALL HAIL COPYRIGHT!

    link to this | view in thread ]

  12. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 2 Jun 2017 @ 11:35am

    Re: The constant fear of Techdirt: that someone might be paid for their work, and worse when a large corporation can't use it for free.

    What work? Typing 140 characters is creative work? He gets paid for his tweets? And for his profile picture on his twitter account? By whom?

    You're really stretching your trolling on this one.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  13. icon
    orbitalinsertion (profile), 2 Jun 2017 @ 11:57am

    Re: Idiots never see things as they could be

    Lost sales: Pay me for a link to a link. You can look at your tweet-sized image as long as i leave it up in the original location. Terms subject to change without notice.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  14. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 2 Jun 2017 @ 12:59pm

    Re: The constant fear of Techdirt: that someone might be paid for their work, and worse when a large corporation can't use it for free.

    The removal pretty much proves the case.

    An alternative, and more likely explanation is that they did not want to waste time and money educating someone about copyright law.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  15. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 2 Jun 2017 @ 1:28pm

    Re: The constant fear of Techdirt: that someone might be paid for their work, and worse when a large corporation can't use it for free.

    Your accuracy at missing the point is at an professional level these days.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  16. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 2 Jun 2017 @ 2:04pm

    I suppose next he's going to sue some one for not asking permission to post the physical address of some museum where one of his photos is on display?

    Replace "physical" with "electronic" and you have exactly what he's already sued over...

    link to this | view in thread ]

  17. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 5 Jun 2017 @ 7:29am

    Someone posting their pic on twitter, approving use of that photo by someone else, all seems fairly legit advertising.
    However Sky, embedding the image is rather cheeky as basically it's Sky using someone elses image without paying them, yet Sky will have ads and be monetizing that image. Embedding a tweet is not really any different to pulling in an image from a third party website in terms of "image theft".
    As has been said, they vigorously try and enforce their copyrights e.g. anyone in UK watching premier league football via means other than Sky, so a company so keen on hassling others over breaches of their copyright should be doing due diligence on images, but instead these sue happy companies seem to regard images on social media as fair game.
    Sympathy for a company that sued skype as it contains sky... not a lot.
    It should also be noted that in UK Sky is much like Fox in US, some people love their politics, some hate it, it might also be the tweeter was doing this as they did not want to be seen as their tweet endorsing Sky.
    Plus UK image copyright is bizarrely complicated, plenty of specialist companies make a living in this area (you need them as back cover if you publish a book in UK with images other than those you have produced yourself).
    Twitter TOS in terms of image embed could easily be regarded as incompatible with UK image copyright laws (UK law is quite good at saying, your OS may say this but that is not viable in UK law)

    link to this | view in thread ]


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