Hi Raul,
no opening discussion there yet. The time for it in Germany would be after (and if) the EU FoP harmonisation calls for opening the issue nationally. In practice the limitation on "from public grouds, ground level" has not lead to too much uncertainty IIRC, the Hundertwasserhaus case being an exception. That said, private drones becoming ever more popular definitely will open this discussion again. So maybe we should focus on things like interior of public buildings, which are also not covered under FoP in Germany.
Greetz John
2016-06-01 14:20 GMT+02:00 Raul Veede raul.veede@gmail.com:
Hi.
Has there been any discussion about possibly (re)opening the question of the clause limiting FoP that demands that the pictures should be taken _from_ a public place? It could be argued this creates complications for businesses (as clearly demonstrated by the Hundertwasser case) and has potential for unlimited amount of uncertainty (the place where the photographer stood usually remains unseen on the picture itself, so the legality is hard to determine afterwords, especially on the Internet, e.g. on Commons). Most jurisdictions with FoP can get very well by without such a clause, and it is hard to see what benefit it creates for the public, or actually even for any private rightsholders.
Best,
Raul, working on FoP in Estonia
On Wed, Jun 1, 2016 at 1:57 PM, John Hendrik Weitzmann < john.weitzmann@wikimedia.de> wrote:
Hi all,
@Jens: Thx for the warm welcome. The settling in is not quite done yet. I'm still watching/learning and trying to tend to urgent things on the way. The justice ministry is high on the meeting agenda, a direct contact to the head of their copyright unit exists. Their ideas and initiatives around exceptions & limitations definitely touch on Wikiprojects. Any concrete suggestions welcome. Main items on this year's WMDE work plan regarding lawmaking are public works, freedom of panorama, database directive and ancillary publichers right, the three last of which happen mainly on the EU level as yet.
Best John
2016-06-01 8:01 GMT+02:00 Mathias Schindler mathias.schindler@gmail.com :
Hi,
On Tue, May 17, 2016 at 11:33 PM, Jens Best best.jens@gmail.com wrote:
I heard that the German ministry of justice is reevaluating the "Schrankenregeln" (kind of the German version of fair use) as one
aspect of
this year's copyright laws reevaluation. Wouldn't that be a possible
focus
which relates to the volunteer work of the Wikiprojects?
a more precise translation of Schrankenregeln is "limitations and exceptions" in copyright. EU member states can implement exceptions listed in the InfoSoc Directive, they are not allowed to implement exceptions not listed there. The current German government has announced to adjust certain exceptions dealing with education. Other than that, the introduction of a fair use clause in German copyright would require some legislation on the EU level*
Mathias
- (Martin Senftleben is slightly more optimistic here
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1959554)
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