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- Darren Toogood
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As the photographs are on an open profile on Facebook, available for any member of the public to view, I would say it is Ok to use them?
The photograph was of a deceased person - Don't think he was going to chase me for using the photo!
So hypothetically; If I were to die in a newsworthy manner and the media were to use my profile picture. Would the copyright holder of my profile picture* be able to claim for breach of copyright from whoever has used it?
(*Self-shot, so my next of kin.)
As the photographs are on an open profile on Facebook, available for any member of the public to view, I would say it is Ok to use them?
The photograph was of a deceased person - Don't think he was going to chase me for using the photo!
The photograph was of a deceased person - Don't think he was going to chase me for using the photo!
The deceased person may not own the copyright of the photo - that is where you are getting mixed up Darren, it is the photographer (in most cases) that own the copyright not the subject.
Even if it was a self portrait, copyright still exists in the photograph for 70 years after the author's death. Therefore the estate could pursue you.
It is still breaking copyright, even if photographer is dead, unless the newspaper ask first, or pay a fee, or make sure the photographer's name is in the by-line, or wait 70 years after the photographer's death!
Why worry about copyright rules for something like that?
Don't you think that if you die in a newsworthy manner, it is not copyright matters you or your family and friends should be worried about, it is actually newspapers and news agencies worried about being taken to courts for libel?