At 05:28 PM 8/15/2005, Bob W wrote:

I don't deny that buildings can be copyrighted. I do deny that a photograph
of a building is a copy of the building.

If you're sued for making commercial use of a photo of the building I
strongly doubt that it because of a copyright violation.

--
Cheers,
 Bob

In the USA, making the photo might be considered a "derivative work" under copyright law. You don't have to make copies of a copyrighted work in its original medium to infringe upon the original copyright. If I create a sculpture, and you come along and sell lots of photos of my sculpture without my permission, I think that qualifies as a "derivative work" and you would be infringing on my intellectual property. I know that people have painted pictures, and later successfully sued photographers who created very similar photographs. I also know that the reverse has happened. Some painters have been successfully sued for selling paintings which were too similar to an existing copyrighted photograph.

There is at least one more thing to consider. Buildings can also be protected as a trademark, if the company uses a likeness of the building to uniquely represent itself, or one of its product lines. So, even if you didn't get sued for copyright infringement, you might get sued over a trademark infringement, if the likeness of that building was registered as a trademark.

I wonder what happens if a person takes an aerial photo of a city, or even just a distant photo of a city skyline, which happens to incorporate one of these buildings? What are the rules then? Would this be fair use?

Is it just me, or is this is all getting too complicated for mere mortals to keep up with?


take care,
Glen

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