On June 11, 2018, another head scratching decision came out of the Eastern District of Virginia, one that has the potential to seriously erode the copyright protections afforded photographers.
The case, Brammer v.Violent Hues Productions LLC,[ref]2018 WL 2921089, Eastern District of Virginia 2018[/ref] has a very simple set of facts:
- Plaintiff takes a time lapse photograph of the Washington D.C. neighborhood known as "Adams-Morgan"
- Defendant, who operates the "Northern Virginia Film Festival" copies photo off internet, crops it, and places on its website to illustrate things to do in the D.C. area
- Plaintiff sends cease and desist letter
- Defendant removes the photograph from the website
- Plaintiff sues for copyright infringement
- Defendant claims (all together now) "fair use"
- Under 17 USC 102, every work of artistic expression is protected by copyright the moment it is placed in a tangible media. In short, everything is protected by copyright, unless and until the time that the author disclaims it.
- There is no such thing as "potentially be copyrighted." If it's in a tangible media, it's copyrighted.
- Under 17 USC 401, there is no requirement that an author place copyright notice on his work.
- Nowhere in 17 USC 107 do the words "good faith" appear in describing the parameters of fair use.