HBO Wins Stupid Copyright, Trademark Lawsuit Brought By Graffiti Artist Over 2 Seconds Of Background Scenery
from the tag-your-it dept
Whenever a company like HBO gets targeted with a lawsuit over intellectual property concerns, you might think we find it tempting to jump all over them in each and every case. After all, HBO has the distinction of being notably horrible when it comes to enforcing its own IP, from shutting down viewing parties, to offering streaming options, to abusing the the DMCA process just to keep spoilers from existing, as though that could possibly work.
But the truth is the fun we have in cases where these types are found to be in legal trouble over intellectual property only extends to when that legal trouble is in some way warranted. When its not, we find that there is a helpful other party on which to heap our ire. That's the case in a lawsuit HBO recently won against graffiti artist Itoffee R. Gayle, who complained about his work appearing in a scene of the HBO show Vinyl. The court ruled that HBO's use was de minimis, or so fleeting so as to cause no injury and therefore not be actionable.
But just how fleeting was HBO's use? Well...
One episode of the show included a scene of a woman walking down a street in New York City where she passes by a dumpster tagged with graffiti that says “art we all.” The graffiti artist, Itoffee R. Gayle, claims that this depiction violated his copyright and trademark rights. According to his complaint, HBO never tried to contact him or license the graffiti. Of course, as the court agreed, HBO didn’t actually need to try to contact Gayle and no license fee was needed because not all copying is unlawful.
Looking at the use of the graffiti art in the episode, the court notes that Gayle’s claims “are premised on a fleeting shot of barely visible graffiti painted on what appears to be a dumpster in the background of a single scene” and that the art appears for no more than two to three seconds. Two to three seconds. Of an entire episode. Yup, sounds pretty de minimis to me. The court goes on, noting that the graffiti is not pictured by itself or close-up, plays no role in the plot, and “is hard enough to notice when the video is paused at the critical moment. It is next to impossible to notice when viewing the episode in real time.” The judge seems pretty annoyed by the copyright infringement claim, noting that “Gayle’s [claims] border on frivolous.”
I'll say this: the court showed far more patience and restraint than an Honorable Judge Geigner would have to Gayle. To waste the court's time with an argument over both copyright and trademark rights dealing with the background scenery of 2 seconds worth of film is so plainly absurd that anger is the only proper response. This was a clear money-grab and, frankly, one based on a premise of silly. It only takes a moment of backing up and thinking about what motivation HBO had here in using this scenery in this shot to know that nothing untoward was done with Gayle's art. It wasn't a theme, it wasn't featured, it wasn't referenced beyond barely being in the shot. It was entirely incidental.
The trademark claim fell for the same reason.
While Gayle attempts to argue that HBO intentionally picked this particular piece of graffiti art to use in the background, the court concludes, “HBO’s motive in depicting the graffiti is irrelevant to the de minimis inquiry.” The copying is not actionable, because its use was so small, even if there was a thematic reason for it. For similar reasons, the court also rejects Gayle’s trademark claims.
It's long past time that courts start issuing some punishment to those that gum up the court system with this sort of bullshit. If nothing else, putting me in the corner of HBO deserves some sort of punitive action.
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Filed Under: bacground, copyright, graffiti, itoffee gayle, trademark
Companies: hbo
Reader Comments
The First Word
“'How dare they not pay for for two seconds of my illegal art!'
One episode of the show included a scene of a woman walking down a street in New York City where she passes by a dumpster tagged with graffiti that says “art we all.” The graffiti artist, Itoffee R. Gayle, claims that this depiction violated his copyright and trademark rights
I can only assume that NYC has some rather strange laws regarding graffiti that make it legal to tag city property, as it seems with this lawsuit the artist made it very clear who tagged the dumpster in question, and if that is a crime then he all but handed a conviction to any prosecutor who cares to run with it.
As for the case itself, it strikes me as a win-win. The idiot artist got slapped down for a hilariously weak cash-grab(though an actual penalty rather than just not winning would have been nice), and HBO was forced to waste some money in court being on the receiving end of a copyright/trademark claim.
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Dumpster Fire
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'How dare they not pay for for two seconds of my illegal art!'
One episode of the show included a scene of a woman walking down a street in New York City where she passes by a dumpster tagged with graffiti that says “art we all.” The graffiti artist, Itoffee R. Gayle, claims that this depiction violated his copyright and trademark rights
I can only assume that NYC has some rather strange laws regarding graffiti that make it legal to tag city property, as it seems with this lawsuit the artist made it very clear who tagged the dumpster in question, and if that is a crime then he all but handed a conviction to any prosecutor who cares to run with it.
As for the case itself, it strikes me as a win-win. The idiot artist got slapped down for a hilariously weak cash-grab(though an actual penalty rather than just not winning would have been nice), and HBO was forced to waste some money in court being on the receiving end of a copyright/trademark claim.
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Re: 'How dare they not pay for for two seconds of my illegal art!'
As to the trademark, did he actually apply for a trademark? Was that mark being used in commerce? What markets did that mark apply to? Why did the court not take notice of the application of trademark rules and how they apply to this case?
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I almost wish the plaintiff's attorney had gone and found cases where HBO had made the same sort of "any use is infringement, no matter how minor" argument and won, and used that to shoot down HBO's defense here just to drive home to the media companies the point that their idea of how copyright works is just as dangerous for them as it is for the public.
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I didn't catch what court this was in, but
use was de minimis, or so fleeting so as to cause no injury and therefore not be actionable.
obviously rule out CAFC.
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copyright yet again taking a dump on us all
Or can a criminal act be copyrighted or trademarked? How about that New York sex cult that has the leader brand his women like cattle? Are photographs of those branding scars that have been all over the press an act of copyright infringement?
Here's a plan: every graffiti artist who might want to ever claim copyright on his "art" must immediately *register* it -- in person -- with both the property owner and the local police.
A footnote: isn't the word "dumpster" itself still a registered trademark of Dempster Brothers, Inc.?
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Re: copyright yet again taking a dump on us all
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Re: Re: copyright yet again taking a dump on us all
On one hand we have a property owner being told he can't paint his building to cover graffiti and on another hand we have a property owner being told he must paint his building to cover graffiti.
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Re: Amusing
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This isn't an artist.
Artists can get stuck in situations where their hands unwittingly tied in matters of IP enforcement by their labels and studios, but I very much doubt this city-permit-holding-vandal is being managed by a huge corporation. He's most likely self-managed.
This is not a true artist, this is a greedy businessman with an art degree.
Also, he has a stupid name, maybe that's why he grew up to be such a dick. What the fuck kind of name is Itoffee?
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de minimis
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Re: de minimis
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Re: Re: copyright yet again taking a dump on us all
The court ruled that an injunction (a court order to preserve the building) was unnecessary to protect the interests of the artists, and then later ruled that he should have preserved the building to preserve the artists' interests. Kinda strange and contradictory.
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Re: 'How dare they not pay for for two seconds of my illegal art!'
That would make the art the property of that company, and the company the proper party to bring any lawsuit.
Was the copyright registered? That's required to recover damages. The trademark might not need to be registered, but the movie company certainly isn't misusing the trademark. Was the art signed? How would the company know who to contact with a request to license the work?
This lawsuit has so many holes that it's not arguably frivolous, it's absolutely frivolous.
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Re: This isn't an artist?
If this was filed to make a point. Point taken. Kudos.
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Re: This isn't an artist.
Step 1: Sue HBO and make sure the graffiti put into the public record as part of the court case.
Step 2: Make sure legal-analysis sites (such as this one) cover the story.
Step 3: Profit from the exposure bought for just the cost of filing a court case.
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What Court? [was Re: ]
United States District Court, Southern District of New York.
SDNY.
You were too lazy to glance at the document?
The document is embedded right there in Geigner's article. And even if you can't see the embed in your browser, the pdf is accessible.
You were too lazy to glance at the document? The name of the court is at the top of the document.
SDNY.
United States District Court, Southern District of New York.
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Re: Re: Amusing
The idea isn't to get a ruling about whether it's de minimis fair use. The idea is to get a ruling that the defendant (HBO) can't raise de minimis fair use as a defense either because they've themselves prevailed on the claim that de minimis use is still infringing or (better, because it'd apply to all media companies and not just HBO) that de minimis use doesn't make it fair use. This would hit the media companies hardest because they have the widest variety of possible-fair-use occurrences in their product and are open to claims from the largest number of copyright holders.
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Re: What Court? [was Re: ]
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Re: Re: What Court? [was Re: ]
It is a eminently notable yet tragic fact, a fact borne out by long and harshly bitter experience, that many or even most distinguished members of the internet commentariat — do not read the fucking articles.
Although, perhaps that's only at those other absurd sites.
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Re: Re: Re: What Court? [was Re: ]
Unless I am completely off the mark, the original comment had almost nothing to do with the article, rather it was a shot at the CAFC by claiming that it couldn't be them because they would never have found that de minims applies, nor that not all uses require licensing.
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Re: de minimis
The entire artwork made up, let's say 1% of the screen for two seconds, out of a sixty minute show. 1/100 of 2/60 of 1/60, 1/180,000th of HBO's work.
However, HBO'S screencapture would be 1/1th of your poster. It's completely their copyrighted material, even though it was a very small part of their entire content. De minimis would not apply.
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Re: Re: de minimis
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We need his Art
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Re: Re: Re: Re: What Court? [was Re: ]
Correct. I was making a jab at how utterly inept CAFC has shown itself to be at undersranding basic copyright concepts.
Even thoughh the article makes it clear it's not CAFC by mentioning Hon. Judge Geigner, and the link says NY southern district court, I used that I couldn't find that specific court name in the article itself to construct the needle with which to make the jab. Didn't want to be completely unrelated to the article, after all.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: What Court? [was Re: ]
Copyright, of course, should under no circumstances ever be confused with trademark.
For instance, totally unlike copyright law, trademark law occasionally uses the soi disant, ‘Moron in a hurry test.’
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Re: Re: Re: de minimis
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Re: 'How dare they not pay for for two seconds of my illegal art!'
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Re: We need his Art
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