from the even-governments-think-it's-ok-to-copy dept
Jon Snow points us to the story of a photographer who discovered that a photograph he took of a cowboy hoisting a saddle is
being used as the background image on approximately 4.5 million inspection stickers:
According to the report, the state had prison inmates create the stickers, and one simply scanned the image out of a "Texas Parks & Wildlife" magazine and used it as the background image. The photographer tried to get the state to pay up, but it refused, leading to the lawsuit. As Snow notes, this certainly might make you wonder what the statutory damages would be on 4.5 million instances of infringement? Of course, some of this may depend on the terms under which the original photo was licensed for the magazine (and if the magazine is a state run operation). Also, I could see the state claiming
"sovereign immunity," which has become popular for state governments when they're accused of patent and copyright infringement claims. You see kids, when
governments infringe, it's no big deal. But when regular everyday citizens do so, they should be forced to
pay tens of thousands of dollars, apparently. Seems perfectly fair, right?
Filed Under: copyright, inspection stickers, photograph, texas