Copyright All Rights Reserved / Photo Credit: WPD Legal
COPYRIGHT / PUBLIC DOMAIN / FAIR USE… (In
the Entertainment industry. What does public domain / fair use / copyright mean?)
Public Domain / Fair Use / Copyright
Public domain
As explained by film production manager Eve Light
Honthaner, prior to 1989 publicity photos taken to promote a film actor or
other celebrity were not usually copyrighted, and were intended to remain free
for publications to use wherever possible:
Publicity photos (star headshots) have traditionally not
been copyrighted. Since they are disseminated to the public, they are generally
considered public domain, and therefore clearance by the studio that produced
them is not necessary.
Honathaner distinguishes "Publicity Photos (star
headshots)" from "Production Stills (photos taken on the set of the film
or TV show during the shooting)", noting that production stills "must
be cleared with the studio". Creative Clearance offers the same text as
Honathaner, but adds that newer publicity stills may contain a copyright.
In 2007, media lawyer Nancy Wolff, wrote with respect to
the "photo archive of entertainment industry publicity pictures, historic
still images widely distributed by the studios to advertise and promote their
then new releases":
It has been assumed that these images are most likely in
the public domain or owned by studios that freely distributed the images
without any expectation of compensation. Archives will lend these images for a
fee to publishers and producers of documentaries for 'editorial' uses, in
keeping with the original intent to publicize the movie or promote the actor.
Seeing these images in print years later, some photographers, or their heirs,
attempt to assert rights that most believed to be extinguished or abandoned.
As a result, she indicates:
There is a vast body of photographs, including but not
limited to publicity stills, that have no notice as to who may have created
them.... Without knowing where the photos came from, or what long lost parent
may appear and claim the 'orphaned work,' licensing the work becomes risky
business. For publishers, museums, and other archives that are risk-averse,
this leads to a large body of works that will never be published.
Film historian Gerald Mast explains how the new 1989
copyright revisions only protected publicity works that complied with all
earlier requirements in addition to filing a copyright registration within 5
years of first publication:
According to the old copyright act, such production stills
were not automatically copyrighted as part of the film and required separate
copyrights as photographic stills. The new copyright act similarly excludes the
production still from automatic copyright but gives the film's copyright owner
a five-year period in which to copyright the stills. Most studios have never
bothered to copyright these stills because they were happy to see them pass
into the public domain, to be used by as many people in as many publications as
possible."
In the 2011 Eighth Circuit case Warner Bros. Entertainment
v. X One X Productions, the court recognized that a selection of publicity
stills from two 1939 films were in the public domain because they had not been
published with the required notice, or because their copyrights had not been
renewed. Although Warner Bros. argued otherwise, the court found that these
stills did not share the films' valid copyrights, and that the images'
dissemination constituted general publication without notice. Other arguments
related to derivative uses of the images were upheld, and an injunction against
X One X was granted because certain "products combining extracts from the
public domain materials in a new arrangement infringe the copyright in the
corresponding film". The decision quoted from Nimmer on Copyright, which
explains that, while films were generally registered for copyright protection,
"much less care was typically exercised during production and in the
publicity office" with photographs taken of the actors on set being
"sent off to newspapers before the film’s release, in order to generate a buzz
about its opening."
Fair use
Kristin Thompson, reporting as the chair of an ad hoc
committee on fair use organized by the Society for Cinema and Media Studies, contends
"that it is not necessary for authors to request permission to reproduce
frame enlargements . . . and some trade presses that publish educational and
scholarly film books also take the position that permission is not necessary
for reproducing frame enlargements and publicity photographs."
Thompson also notes that even if such images are not
already public domain, they could be considered "fair use" under
provisions of US law:
Most frame enlargements are reproduced in books that
clearly fall into the first provision's categories of "teaching,"
"criticism," "scholarship," or "research," and
hence there seems little doubt that such illustrations would qualify as fair
use by this criterion. Since most university presses are nonprofit
institutions, illustrations in their books and journals would be more likely to
fall into the fair-use category than would publications by more commercial
presses.
In addition, Thompson refers to the argument that the
burden of proof of copyright for such publicity images would fall on the
studios producing them:
One important argument has been made concerning the
publication of publicity photographs. If such a photograph has been circulated
for publication at some point and reproduced without a copyright notice
accompanying it, it should then fall within the public domain. Throughout the
history of the cinema, many publicity photos have appeared in newspapers and
magazines without such notices. If a scholar or educator were to publish a
publicity photo, the burden of proof would then fall on the studio or
distributor to prove that the still had never been published without the
copyright notice.
United States Copyright Office
The United States Copyright Office, a part of the Library of
Congress, is the official U.S. government body that maintains records of
copyright registration in the United States, including a Copyright Catalog. It
is used by copyright title searchers who are attempting to clear a chain of
title for copyrighted works.
The Copyright Office is housed on the fourth floor of the
James Madison Memorial Building of the Library of Congress, at 101 Independence
Avenue, SE, in Washington, DC.
History
The United States Constitution gives Congress the power to
enact laws establishing a system of copyright in the United States, and the
Copyright Act of 1790, the first federal copyright law, was enacted in May 1790
(with the first work being registered within two weeks). Originally, claims
were recorded by Clerks of U.S. district courts. In 1870, copyright functions
were centralized in the Library of Congress under the direction of the then
Librarian of Congress Ainsworth Rand Spofford. The Copyright Office became a
separate department of the Library of Congress in 1897, and Thorvald Solberg
was appointed the first Register of Copyrights.
Administering the copyright law
The Office examines all applications and deposits
presented for registration of original and renewal copyright claims to
determine their acceptability for registration under the provisions of the
copyright law. The Office also records documents related to copyright
ownership.
The Copyright Office records the bibliographic
descriptions and the copyright facts of all works registered. The archives
maintained by the Copyright Office are an important record of America’s
cultural and historical heritage. Containing nearly 45 million individual
cards, the Copyright Card Catalog housed in the James Madison Memorial Building
comprises an index to copyright registrations in the United States from 1870
through 1977. Records after 1977 are maintained through an online database of
more than 16 million entries.
As a service unit of the Library of Congress, the
Copyright Office is part of the legislative branch of government. The Office
provides copyright policy advice to Congress. At the request of Congress, the
Copyright Office advises and assists the Congress in the development of
national and international copyright policy; drafts legislation; and prepares
technical studies on copyright-related matters.
The Compendium of U.S. Copyright Office Practices manual
documents the Copyright Office's practices in its administration of copyright
law.
A new fee schedule for certain Office services is
effective as of May 1, 2014. The Copyright office’s fees were last updated in
2009. Fees increased for certain registration and recordation and associated
services, as well as certain search and review services for FOIA requests
Freedom of Information Act (United States). In May 2014, the Office also
reduced some renewal application and addendum fees in an effort to “encourage the
filing of more renewal claims” and thereby help improve public records about
copyright ownership.
Providing information services to the public
The Copyright Office provides public information and
reference services concerning copyrights and recorded documents. The public can
keep up on developments in the Copyright Office by subscribing to U.S.
Copyright Office NewsNet, a free electronic mailing list that issues periodic
email messages to alert subscribers to hearings, deadlines for comments, new
and proposed regulations, new publications, and other copyright-related
subjects of interest. Subscribe on the Copyright Office website.
Library of Congress
In 1870, Congress passed a law that centralized the
copyright system in the Library of Congress. This law required all owners of
copyrights of publicly distributed works to deposit in the Library two copies
of every such work registered in the United States, whether it is a book,
pamphlet, map, print, or piece of music. Supplying the information needs of the
Congress, the Library of Congress has become the world’s largest library and
the de facto national library of the United States. This repository of more
than 162 million books, photographs, maps, films, documents, sound recordings,
computer programs, and other items has grown largely through the operations of
the copyright system, which brings deposits of every copyrighted work into the
Library.
Duties
The Copyright Office consults with interested copyright
owners, industry and library representatives, bar associations, and other
interested parties on issues related to the copyright law.
The Copyright Office promotes improved copyright
protection for U.S. creative works abroad through its International Copyright
Institute. Created within the Copyright Office by Congress in 1988, the
International Copyright Institute provides training for high-level officials
from developing and newly industrialized countries and encourages development
of effective intellectual property laws and enforcement overseas.
The website has information about new copyright relevant
legislation and a list of designated agents under the Digital Millennium
Copyright Act (DMCA) and the Online Copyright Infringement Liability Limitation
Act (OCILLA) and information about Copyright Arbitration Royalty Panel (CARP)
system of ad hoc copyright royalty arbitrators (now being phased out and
replaced by the Copyright Royalty Board).
Sources,
References & Credits: Google, Wikipedia, Wikihow, Pinterest, IMDB, Linked
In, Indie Wire, Film Making Stuff, Hiive, Film Daily, New York Film Academy, The
Balance, The Numbers, Film Maker, TV Guide Magazine, Media Match, Quora, Creative
Skill Set, Investopedia, Variety, No Film School, Daily Variety, The Film
Agency, Best Sample Resume, How Stuff Works, Career Trend, Producer's Code of
Credits, Producers Guild of America, Film Connection, Entertainment Careers, Adhere
Creative, In Deed, Glass Door, Pay Scale, Merriam-Webster, Job Monkey, Studio
Binder, The Collective, Production Hub, The Producer's Business Handbook by
John J. Lee Jr., Honathaner, Eve Light. The Complete Film Production Handbook,
Brian Dzyak (2010). What I Really Want to Do
on Set in Hollywood: A Guide to Real Jobs in the Film Industry, Andrew Dawson;
Sean Holmes (2 August 2012). Working in the Global Film and Television
Industries: Creativity, Systems, Space, Patronage, Clearance Guidelines for
Producers, Mast, Gerald. "Film Study and the Copyright Law", from
Cinema Journal,
http://www.wga.org/,
https://www.copyright.gov/,
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