Geoff_M
DIS Veteran, DVC Member, "Cum Hoc Ergo Propter Hoc
- Joined
- Sep 13, 2000
- Messages
- 11,979
We're starting to blend two separate legal concepts: copyright and the rights of exploitation. Say I take a picture of you in a public park and end up using it in a poster that I then sell. You are easily recognizable in my poster. I own the copyright to the image, but if I use the image for personal gain and you object and I have failed to secure from you a release to use your image in a product that I am marketing, then you can legally stop me from using that image in that manner. I can make all of the personal copies I want and its OK, but once I use it in a "for profit" manner, it's a whole new legal ball game. Legally, you have a right to control the public use of your image. For people, this is known as the "right of publicity".This is a really interesting discussion. I wonder how the presence of the "Kodak Photopoints", or whatever they are called, affects this. Given that you are being explicitly encouraged to take photos there, wouldn't it be harder for Disney (should they wish to) to restrict the use of any photos you take?
regards,
/alan
The same sort of protections are given to works that contain things like trademarks, copyrighted works, and structures. Back when it was still alive, the well known "Lone Cypress Tree" at the Pebble Beach golf course was a trademarked "thing". You could not legally sell works that contained the tree without consent from the course's owners. It's safe to say that the same legal protections have been secured for things like Cindy's Castle and other major WDW landmarks.
The exception to this is when the image is used in an "editorial" manner. In these cases, permission to use the images of people or other protected things is not needed. "Editorial" is basically defined a when an image is "published". For example, if I'm writing a book on a celebrity that's an "unauthorized biography", I can use photos of my subject without their permission (as long as I secure the permission of the image's copyright holder). Here's a little known fact, the sale of a photo in and of itself is considered an "editorial use". I can sell photos I took at WDW all I want without Disney permission. But if I modify the commercial offering beyond that to offer the photo in a frame, or turn it into a poster... then I'm liable to Disney. No US court has ever ruled that anyone must secure the permission of a subject to simply sell a photo of the person. Disney may try and tell me or eBay otherwise, but the case law would not be on their side. But in the courts, a mere photo is simply another form of "publication."
Lastly, Disney is not in legal jeopardy of losing their right to control the exploitation of their properties by the mere placement of the Kodak photo sites. They can ask people to stop taking pictures on their property at any time and threaten to eject people that won't comply. I can assure you that if there's another accident on a WDW attraction and people start taking photos, they will be told in a firm and polite manner to put their cameras down. People that are on rides that have to be evacuated for any reason through backstage areas are told the same.