Do You Own the Photos? - Photography Copyright/Licensing Simplified & Explained!

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  • čas přidán 9. 06. 2021
  • As experienced photographers, we deal with copyright on a regular basis. But we sometimes assume our clients know just as much about copyright, image use, and licensing as we do...and that's a wrong assumption on our part.
    Hopefully this video can simply and clear up some questions.
    / matthewaphoto
    www.matthewaphoto.com

Komentáře • 39

  • @JerodBeeson
    @JerodBeeson Před 2 lety +21

    I wish I could thumbs up this video twice.

  • @cnlicnli
    @cnlicnli Před 3 lety +12

    Matthew does a *great* job explaining that freelance photographers are in the *“licensing business.”* Our photo copyrights are NOT sold, but rather, they’re *licensed* to specific clients, stock, and other parties.
    Here’s some language you can include in your photography agreements: *“Rights granted to client are NOT transferable to others!”* -- the client is NOT permitted to share, give-away, and/or sell the licensed images without the photographer’s written permission.
    Contrary to what you may think, your *“registered”* copyrights (and trademarks & trade secrets) are your most valuable business assets, and NOT your cameras, gear, computer software, or studio.
    Way too many CZcamsrs, non-attorney influencers, photographers, and creatives are *CLUELESS* about intellectual property; way too often their shared copyright information is simply *WRONG!*
    *Matthew, on the other hand, walks the talk!* I searched the US Copyright Office’s Public Catalog database and found approx. ten photo copyright registrations on file. *His images are protected from copyright infringers* and potentially rogue clients who begin using his licensed images without making full payment.
    Watch JUST the first 20-seconds of attorney Joshua Kaufman’s copyright video to understand why *timely* registering your photo/video copyright claims really, really count: czcams.com/video/cBOKkrleY3Y/video.html

  • @candicecaulfield9386
    @candicecaulfield9386 Před měsícem

    Thank you so much for this video! It’s always so hard to explain to clients

  • @CaptainJack63
    @CaptainJack63 Před 3 lety +3

    Great video lesson! This is a thing I always have to explain to wedding couples.

  • @nicks9763
    @nicks9763 Před 3 měsíci

    Thank you for this video. I have been looking into this recently because I want to make a book of my portraits (some of which I haven't shot yet). I learned that as the photographer, I don't own the person's likeness in the photos so I can't do whatever I want with the pictures even though I technically own the copyright. The only way around this is to have a contract where everything is very clear about ownership so you don't have legal issues later down the line.

  • @taceyjungmann3187
    @taceyjungmann3187 Před 3 lety +2

    Great job - love the black and white pop-outs that identify the questions of concern.

  • @choobracer
    @choobracer Před 2 lety

    Thanks Matthew, for the best, clearest description I've ever heard explaining this. The song analogy is perfect.

  • @CWilderH
    @CWilderH Před 3 lety

    Matthew, saw this on APA. The best explanation for regular people that I've heard. I've used some of these same comparisons but yours are better and you have everything here clear and concise. Every photographer and anyone who hires photographers is obligated to watch this.

    • @MatthewAPhoto
      @MatthewAPhoto  Před 3 lety

      You’re awesome Cole! Thank you so much! That’s very kind of you to say 🙂

  • @klayf_
    @klayf_ Před 2 lety

    thanks for this video, really helpful

  • @chasehenderson2250
    @chasehenderson2250 Před 3 lety +2

    Bookmarking this video for sure! I shoot real estate and run into questions about this stuff all the time. Thank you!

  • @zxcmqw
    @zxcmqw Před 2 lety

    Thank for the clear and concise explanation. WIll show this to educate clients!

  • @yosefben-yehudah4604
    @yosefben-yehudah4604 Před 8 měsíci

    So with copyright and whatnot, should I as a photographer use watermarks on my photos as well? I am doing research on this, and I wanted to see whether its a good idea or not to put my watermark on every single photo I take.
    Any other photographers out there, reading this, use watermarks? Why/why not?

    • @edenkefale7129
      @edenkefale7129 Před 6 měsíci +2

      I personally don't use watermakes because I believe it takes the focus away from the photo and it is easy to remove as well

    • @cnlicnli
      @cnlicnli Před 4 měsíci

      @yosefben-yehudah4604 wrote, “…should I as a photographer use watermarks on my photos as well? I am doing research on this, and I wanted to see whether its a good idea or not to put my watermark on every single photo I take.”
      I do, and here’s why: To REINFORCE my creative rights, I affix my posted photographs, videos, and other works of authorship with *watermarks (logos),* my copyright attribution (with URL and/or social media handle), robust metadata, and/or other *“Copyright Management Information” (CMI* -- part of US copyright’s DMCA). CMI/watermarks can be small and/or transparent; they just need to be readable to the average person.
      Non-Fair-Use, US-based CMI violators who KNOWINGLY remove, change, or cover up my CMI with AI, apps, Adobe Photoshop or any other software to hide their infringing actions OR encourage others to infringe can be responsible for my actual damages & lost profits OR statutory damages from $2,500 to $25,000 PLUS my attorney fees & legal costs (at the court’s discretion). See 17 USC §§ 1202-1203.
      Copyright attorney, Andrew D. Epstein, writes, *“We recommend always attaching a watermark or other copyright management information [CMI] to all works that you distribute. Although you do not need to have a copyright registration to recover under the DMCA [CMI], we always recommend [timely] registering your photographs with the Copyright Office to be able to qualify for maximum awards for copyright infringement ($750 to $150,000 per infringement, plus costs and attorney’s fees).”*
      As well, INTENTIONALLY removing or modifying CMI can suggest WILLFUL copyright infringement to a federal judge. If the work was timely registered, the infringer can face two causes of action: Copyright infringement (up to $150,000) + CMI violation (up to $25,000) = up to $175,000 in statutory damages + attorney/legal fees (at the court’s discretion).
      By affixing CMI to my posted works, I can statutorily defeat “innocent infringement” defense claims (the US-based infringer is claiming they didn’t know my work was copyright-protected, and therefore, they shouldn’t have to pay me damages or if there’s liability, they should only have to pay me the minimum statutory damages of $200). See 17 USC § 401(d): Evidentiary Weight of Notice.
      If you choose not to timely register your photographs with the US Copyright Office (USCO), at the very least, affix them with some CMI to retain some legal protection. FYI: Depending on the facts of a case, there are copyright attorneys/litigators who may take your CMI case on “contingency.”
      BTW, and from my observations, the people who complain about seeing watermarks/CMI on posted images are *other* photographers. I have yet to license any of my images to another photographer - they are NOT my targeted client!
      *Timely registering my works + including CMI strengthens my creative & legal rights.*

  • @JohnnyNavarro
    @JohnnyNavarro Před 2 lety

    Thank you for this video! This is such useful information

  • @roadrunner156
    @roadrunner156 Před 3 lety +3

    It's interesting to see how little likes this video got (and 1 dislike at this moment). It seems nobody really cares about copyright, not even photographers. In many forums I see photographers asking for help when they finally see some of their photos illegally published somewhere. We should take care of the issue before it happens, not after. A solid contract with the client and a quick explanation would avoid many headaches down the road

  • @gustavoreisberg
    @gustavoreisberg Před 3 lety

    Thank you so much for your help for all of us, cheers!

  • @louisyang6450
    @louisyang6450 Před 2 lety

    Thank you for your clear explanation. Do clients need to mention the photographer while posting social media even paid?

    • @MatthewAPhoto
      @MatthewAPhoto  Před 2 lety +1

      No, they don't NEED to...but you can ask or require your clients to since you still hold the copyright

  • @davidjaslow6458
    @davidjaslow6458 Před rokem +1

    Excellent Explanation!

  • @CliffMack
    @CliffMack Před 3 lety +1

    Nicely done!

  • @Bijay.Kumar.Behera
    @Bijay.Kumar.Behera Před 9 měsíci

    lets say i own a camera and I rented a photographer to use my camera to produce some images, under such conditions who is the copyright owner?

    • @cnlicnli
      @cnlicnli Před 4 měsíci

      @Bijay.Kumar.Behera wrote, “lets say i own a camera and I rented a photographer to use my camera to produce some images, under such conditions who is the copyright owner?”
      *Under US copyright law,* the person who took the photograph will typically be the copyright owner, unless there’s an agreement that says otherwise.
      If the photographs qualify as “work-for-hire,” then the commissioning party would own the copyrights, not the photographer, assuming there is a written agreement (prior) to the start of the photography assignment.
      The client can also require the photographer to transfer the copyright to them via contract.
      If I’m working as a full-time photographer for a US newspaper, my employer (the newspaper) would automatically and solely retain the copyright of all the photographs I capture.

  • @paco_b_v
    @paco_b_v Před rokem

    Thanks for the video Matthew. About selling prints of places or branded products that are recognized (for instance the Coca-Cola can), is there any problem with the property of the design? For instance, when selling stock photography, we cannot sell pictures of branded products or buildings for commercial purpose. Selling a print is a 'commercial purpose', if I'm not wrong. Is it possible to have legal problems with the creator of the product or building? I would appreciate your answer. Thanks in advance.

    • @MatthewAPhoto
      @MatthewAPhoto  Před rokem

      I can’t speak for sure either way on this. I’ve never placed a single image of my work on a stock photo website (nor do I plan to), so I can’t speak to that situation with a definite answer. What I DO know is that (in most scenarios) if some product appears in an author’s photo, painting, drawing, etc. that company does not have any automatic rights to that authors work.

  • @tkshots
    @tkshots Před 2 lety

    well explained...i took photographs of a local musician she could use to promote her music...many months later,i saw articles about the musician in a local newspaper,a national music magazine,and a national website,all of which used my photographs...when i looked into it,and realised these businesses had to pay me for their use of the shots,i told the musician...she did not want to know

  • @leereidphotography
    @leereidphotography Před rokem

    Great video, thank you 👍👍

  • @maddieb632
    @maddieb632 Před 13 dny

    If a photographer takes photos of a paying client, are they legally allowed to turn around and sell the photos of that client to an additional third party?

    • @MatthewAPhoto
      @MatthewAPhoto  Před 13 dny +1

      If the photos in question are OF the client where their likeness is the clear subject matter of the image… there is a good chance some model release forms may need to be signed by the client before the photographer can do any additional licensing of the photos. An IP attorney can give you a more specific and legally accurate answer to that question.

    • @maddieb632
      @maddieb632 Před 12 dny

      @@MatthewAPhoto That definitely helps! Thank you!

  • @lightandlines
    @lightandlines Před 3 lety

    Gold, gold, GOLD, for Matthew Anderson BOOM! Can you post this to your IG so the rest of us can share it out?

    • @MatthewAPhoto
      @MatthewAPhoto  Před 3 lety

      You're awesome! Thanks so much :-) I think I'd have to somehow condense this even more down to a 60 sec clip for Instagram

    • @lightandlines
      @lightandlines Před 3 lety

      @@MatthewAPhoto not at all. IGTV will let you upload up to an hour worth of footage 👍

  • @Papparratzi
    @Papparratzi Před 2 lety +1

    I’m a Real Estate Magazine publisher.
    I shoot homes primarily when the clients do not provide quality images.
    This process gives my publication an artistic advantage over the competition.
    I allow specified limited use of these images.
    Of course, I do not allow them to be used in my competitions publication.
    Some clients balk at this. I paid for them right?
    I describe it this way.
    You go to the theater, Watch gone with the wind. When you leave, do don’t own Gone With The. Wind, neither does the theater.
    Your ticket bought you a limited time to view the move which is protected under copyright law.
    In the same way, your photos have a limited place where the can be used unless I have sold the copyright to you.
    Previously, I watermarked my images to help identify my images and reduce accidental copyright violations.
    Unfortunately, mls and other digital sources won’t allow the watermark for their own selfish and sometimes nefarious reasons.

  • @Lunatflowers
    @Lunatflowers Před rokem

    💯