JumboBeef
Suspended / Banned
- Messages
- 978
- Edit My Images
- Yes
I have noticed over the last 12 months or so, things are a-changing.
More and more clients want to own copyright when they commission a shoot. It seems more and more photographers are agreeing to this, thus making it harder to disagree yourself........
The point is, is the whole copyright issue outdated? Now, I'm not talking about shoots you have taken, and then sell to clients ~ copyright remaining with the photographer in these cases makes sense: I'm talking about when someone books you, pays for your time and your travel and sends you to a location to shoot for them. More and more clients seem to be taking the view they comissioned the shoot so they should own everything and do whatever they wish with the images afterwards.
.................and I tend to agree.
If you bought a CD of music from your local shop then you are only buying a single copy of that music, and you can't resell it etc. However, if I booked a band to record music just for me, I would want to own the actual music to do with as I feel fit. There are lots of other examples out there........
Someone whe knows what they are doing can spend £600 or so on camera kit and produce very nice photos, and more and more people are doing it which makes it harder and harder to dig your heels in over issues like this (because someone else will come along and do it without the copyright issue).
I used to work in TV, and the cameraman never kept copyright of something he shot: it just never came into it. Someone paid you to do something, you did it and they owned everything. I think the same thing is (slowly) happening in still photography.
More and more clients want to own copyright when they commission a shoot. It seems more and more photographers are agreeing to this, thus making it harder to disagree yourself........
The point is, is the whole copyright issue outdated? Now, I'm not talking about shoots you have taken, and then sell to clients ~ copyright remaining with the photographer in these cases makes sense: I'm talking about when someone books you, pays for your time and your travel and sends you to a location to shoot for them. More and more clients seem to be taking the view they comissioned the shoot so they should own everything and do whatever they wish with the images afterwards.
.................and I tend to agree.
If you bought a CD of music from your local shop then you are only buying a single copy of that music, and you can't resell it etc. However, if I booked a band to record music just for me, I would want to own the actual music to do with as I feel fit. There are lots of other examples out there........
Someone whe knows what they are doing can spend £600 or so on camera kit and produce very nice photos, and more and more people are doing it which makes it harder and harder to dig your heels in over issues like this (because someone else will come along and do it without the copyright issue).
I used to work in TV, and the cameraman never kept copyright of something he shot: it just never came into it. Someone paid you to do something, you did it and they owned everything. I think the same thing is (slowly) happening in still photography.