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A former Kat puts her IPKat boots back on (btw - speaking of boots -
do you remember this charming song?) |
It is a truth universally acknowledged
that Kats like birds very much, and especially birds that tweet about copyright
issues.
While procrastinating getting
updates on Twitter yesterday, this Kat spotted a tweet by delightful former
guest Kat and current MARQUES - Class 46 contributor Laetitia Lagarde (Jacobacci) on this very
topic, ie Twitter + copyright + France
[can
there ever be a better combination?].
So she asked Laetitia to kindly provide more information to IPKat readers and
she tweeted ''Oui!' back in response.
Here's what Laetitia writes:
"Copyright week might be over but today this
former guest IPKat – who, among other things, still tweets [here] about
IP and cats – found it appropriate to pen this post [in a bit more than 140 characters] on the story regarding a French book published by Larousse
(a publishing house specialised in reference works such as dictionaries) that attracted
heavy criticisms, notably [and most shamefully, nods Merpel] accusations of infringing Twitter’s users IP rights. The book's title is Les
Perles des Tweets et du Net, and it consists of a collection of Twitter
users' tweets.
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The pearls/gems of tweets - 100% true! |
Eleonora the Kat inspired
and prompted the legal question of whether tweets can be
protected by copyright (under US law) earlier this month.
Today, the French offer the
following answer.
The “pearls” of Twitter
consist of 289 tweets on the “best of the worst” of Twitter or
vice-versa.
However, the "worstest" thing
was that Larousse did not contact the Twittos (French for
Twitter users) to obtain their authorisation to use their tweets. According
to Twitter ToS,
users retain their rights to any content they
submit, post or display on or through Twitter services (yet granting a
non-exclusive licence to Twitter).
As it is likely to be the
case also under EU originality standard, those tweets can be protected under
French copyright law if the author has expressed his/her own personality in an
original manner. Funnily enough, the very aim of this book was to publish the
most original Twitter gems ...
Furthermore,
most tweets were published in the book without attribution. Larousse thought that by doing so they were protecting themselves against
legal action … But they ignored that this could be considered also as a violation
the authors’ moral rights, in accordance with article L-121-1 of the French IP code.
In a
recent US case, French news agency AFP was found liable of
copyright infringement for unauthorised reproduction of pictures that
photographer Daniel Morel had made available on Twitter. In November 2013, the
District Court for the Southern District of New York ruled that Twitter’s terms of service do not
imply a licence for using images in a commercial context, thus rejecting
AFP’s argument that it could use the pictures because they were freely
available on Twitter.
Amidst claims of copyright
infringement of Twitter users' copyright, yesterday evening Larousse announced
(also via Twitter, of course) that it would withdraw its (infamous) book from
the market. This is an appropriate response to viral accusations ... which perhaps could have been easily avoided in the first place [for instance
just by reading this blog, sighs Merpel]
***
'Copyright' in
Larousse dictionary here and 'mot d’auteur' here
Pearls, gems and cats here
Pearl Jam on Twitter here"
There have been since time immemorial compilations of the best worst answers to the French baccalauréat exams floating about. (Physicist Henri Bouasse was railing about the continually declining knowledge of students. That was in... 1928.)
ReplyDeleteI see that there is even a web site dedicated to their collection, as well as insurance claim letters.
Will the dunces now come forward and claim their IP rights?
Maître Emmanuel Pierrat is a prolific and eclectic author who wrote many serious books inter alia about art, copyright law, moral and image rights, and book publishing.
Amongst his other works are books about sex ("Le sexe et la loi", "Paris érotique"), novels, but more to the point, compilations of the funniest nonsense heard in courts from lawyers and parties, published under the title "brèves de prétoire".
Could this IP specialist get into hot water because of this new decision? I sense irony...
Is tweety bird that popular outside of the states?
ReplyDeleteI did, I did see an infringement of IP rights!
Well it is slightly different in that saleability of this book of tweets is on the basis of their quality, and yet they argue no rights
ReplyDeleteIn the latter the basis is the stupidity of lawyers. Surely the author would love to defend his book on stupidity from a stupid lawyer who brings a case..