On 12 January 2010, Haiti was struck by a severe earthquake,
and photographer, Daniel Morel, was there capturing the devastation with his
camera. Later that day, Morel posted his
images on Twitter. The images were then
shared (or more aptly--retweeted--by other users), and at least one user
falsely claimed ownership of Morel’s images.
The Director of Photography for North and South America at Agence France
Presse (AFP) located Morel’s photos on Twitter on another user’s account and
then sent them into AFP’s system for captioning and distribution on AFP’s
newswire. Once in AFP’s system the
images also became part of Getty Images’ library, through its reciprocal
license with AFP. When Getty first
received the images they were improperly credited to another Twitter user. Eventually, the error was corrected and the
images were properly attributed to Morel.
The images were picked up by several publications, including the
Washington Post. Morel’s counsel as well
as counsel for Corbis, another image licensing company that had an
exclusivity agreement with Morel, contacted the organizations regarding use of
Morel’s images. Although the photos were
eventually removed from AFP’s database as well as Getty’s due to copyright issues, infringing images
remained on the Washington Post’s website.
On March 26, 2010, AFP sued Morel in U.S. District Court for
the Southern District of New York for a declaratory judgment stating that it
had not infringed on Morel’s copyrights and alleging commercial
defamation. In response, Morel filed
counterclaims against AFP, Getty, and the Washington Post for copyright
infringement and violation of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA). This month, the court addressed the parties’
competing summary judgment motions, conclusively ruling on some issues presented by the case.
With respect to Morel’s claim for direct liability for
copyright infringement, AFP argued that the Twitter user license (which applied
to the images when they were first posted by Morel), allowed AFP to use and
license the images. After evaluating Twitter’s
terms of service, the court disagreed, finding that the user agreement provided
a limited license, but did not give permission for AFP to engage in the conduct
at issue. As the court provided, “Indeed,
this is the fatal flaw in AFP's argument: it fails to recognize that even if
some re-uses of content posted on Twitter may be permissible, this does not
necessarily require a general license to use this content as AFP has.”
Getty also asserted an affirmative defense under the DMCA,
arguing that it was not liable for infringement because it qualified for the
safe-harbor provision of the law, which was intended to protect service
providers from liability for copyright infringement when unwittingly hosting
infringing materials or engaging in certain other passive activities. The court declined to find on summary
judgment that Getty qualified for the safe harbor, noting that a jury could
infer that Getty took affirmative acts to distribute the Morel’s photos, such
as entering a license agreement with AFP, actively licensing the photos, and
setting a price for the photos.
Morel also sought elevated statutory damages from AFP,
Getty, and the Washington Post, asserting that each party had acted willfully
in infringing on his copyrights. The
court declined to rule on this issue as well, leaving it for a jury to
determine whether the conduct at issue was willful.
Ultimately, the court granted Morel’s motion for summary
judgment that AFP and the Washington Post were liable for copyright
infringement, but rejected Morel’s arguments regarding the scope of statutory
damages available under the Copyright Act and the DMCA. The court otherwise denied the parties’
cross-motions for summary judgment. The
case, which has been in litigation since 2010, is scheduled to go to trial on
the remaining issues with all trial materials due to the court in late March.
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