Tom Brady |
Can a tweet containing an
unlicensed photograph amount to a copyright infringement by the person who embeds such tweet on their own site?
One
would not be surprised if a question of this kind was asked in Europe [it was actually asked but answered very ambiguously in BestWater, here, whose
conclusions appear now questionable in light of subsequent case law, notably GS Media, here].
On this side of the Atlantic linking can fall within the scope of the right of communication to the public within Article 3(1) of the InfoSoc Directive, although different considerations must be undertaken depending on the case at issue, including whether the link provider is aware of the unlicensed character of the content linked to and/or pursues a profit.
On this side of the Atlantic linking can fall within the scope of the right of communication to the public within Article 3(1) of the InfoSoc Directive, although different considerations must be undertaken depending on the case at issue, including whether the link provider is aware of the unlicensed character of the content linked to and/or pursues a profit.
This very question is now being asked also in the US, where a photographer working
with Getty Images [this had already raised issues of linking and
copyright under US law, eg here], Justin
Goldman, has sued a number of
publishers over the unauthorised embedding, by their relevant publications, of
a tweet containing an unlicensed image of American football quarterback Tom Brady that he had taken.
According
to the complaint filed with the
US District Court for the Southern District of New York, the plaintiff alleges
that the defendants - by embedding content hosted elsewhere (Twitter) - have
infringed his public display right under §106(5) of the
US Copyright Act. According to this provision, the copyright owner has the
right, "in the case of literary, musical,
dramatic, and choreographic works, pantomimes, and pictorial, graphic, or
sculptural works, including the individual images of a motion picture or other
audiovisual work, to display the
copyrighted work publicly".
It
should be recalled that the US, despite being a party to both WIPO
Internet Treaties, does not expressly recognise a making available
right or a right of communication to the public, as instead the EU and its
Member States do.
Not Tom Brady |
However, in the past US courts have had the opportunity to address to some extent linking issues. The
best-known and possibly most relevant decision is the one of the Ninth Circuit
in Perfect
10 v Amazon.com, which discusses the potential liability for the the
displaying of low-resolution thumbnails in response to Google Search
queries. In that case the court considered that, although there was
a prima facie infringement of the plaintiff's rights, the public display right
requires that the work or a copy thereof is actually displayed. That would not
be the case of someone that merely displays copies hosted
on servers other than its own. The Ninth Circuit concluded that “[p]roviding
... HTML instructions is not equivalent to showing a copy.”
As
explained in the Making
Available Study published by the US Copyright Office, the
"Ninth Circuit’s reasoning in Perfect 10 has been relied
on to bar direct infringement claims for instances of inline linking and
framing" (p 49).
This,
however, has not happened without criticisms, especially by (1) those who think
that the US position as interpreted in Perfect 10 would be inconsistent with
this country's international obligations; and (2) by those who argue that the
technological issues at stake in Perfect 10 would be different from those
relevant to the embedding on one's own site of content hosted elsewhere.
According
to the US Copyright Office the treatment of linking under US law remains
uncertain and further guidance from courts is required. Is this new case perhaps the right opportunity?
After
the filing of the complaint by Mr Goldman, a number of amicus curiae briefs
have been filed: they are available here.
Further developments will be closely monitored: watch this space!
Further developments will be closely monitored: watch this space!
Linking in the US: is an embedded tweet an infringement of the public display right?
Reviewed by Eleonora Rosati
on
Friday, November 03, 2017
Rating:
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