National Portrait Gallery vs Wikipedia

Jim Killock, 21 July 2009

National Portrait Gallery's (NPG) threat to sue a Wikipedia administrator for reposting 3,000 images caused a great deal of discussion on our lists and across the media.

It's absurd to use the law to restrain access to creative works that are no longer protected by copyright. Once copyrights have expired - particularly if it resides in a publicly funded institution - that work should be free for all to reuse and remix.

Legal bloggers disagree as to the validity of the claim. Francis Davey, concentrating on the requirement for originality in copyright protection, indicates a UK court would most likely find there has been copyright infringement. Andres Guadamuz disagrees on that but argues the judge would still hold up the claim for breach of a click-wrap contract. Simon Bradshaw suggests there is good reason to doubt not only the claim under copyright but also that under the much-maligned database right.

This disagreement points to why the claim is so fascinating, because it takes in both contentious issues of law - click-wrap contracts, the database right, overzealous protection of copyright works - as well as retrograde practice in the the public sector.

Digital rights advocates like ORG will be looking closely to see if the case opens up the availability of these works in the public domain: as ever, the case justifying the closure of rights is weaker as distribution and reuse is that much easier. Whatever the legal merits, the social, economic and cultural case for the public domain gets stronger.

PL Hayes
Comment

Reply #5 on : Sat July 25, 2009, 10:11:16
“the much-maligned database right”

Yeah, shocking isn't it? James Boyle should be ashamed of himself.
Comment

Reply #4 on : Sun July 26, 2009, 15:06:07
[...] might have heard that the Wikimedia Foundation and the National Portrait Gallery are having a bit of a row these days. At the core of the dispute lies the fact that in march an English wikipedia [...]
Graham Cobb
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Reply #3 on : Mon July 27, 2009, 15:48:36
UK resident readers might be interested to note that I have created a petition to the Prime Minister asking him to make sure that galleries and museums which receive public funds release photos to the public. See http://petitions.number10.gov.uk/artphotos/ for more information.
Comment

Reply #2 on : Fri August 07, 2009, 10:58:46
[...] BBC | Boing Boing | Creative Commons | David Gerard | Edward Winkleman |Guardian | IP Osgoode | ORG | Roger [...]
Comment

Reply #1 on : Tue September 01, 2009, 23:36:00
[...] might have heard that the Wikimedia Foundation and the National Portrait Gallery are having a bit of a row these days. At the core of the dispute lies the fact that in march an English wikipedia [...]

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