Rich Holton wrote:
MacGyverMagic/Mgm wrote:
Public buildings is a clear case, but I think the main problem lies with pictures of people. Unless you want to commit a felony and stalk them, it's pretty much impossible to get non-fair use images for small time actors who don't visit premieres or award ceremonies.
Mgm
I admit that I've never tried myself, but it seems to me that most of these people would be eager to release a free photo. Does actual experience prove otherwise? Or has there really not been much of an attempt made?
In fact I can't think of any examples where a small-time actor was contacted and said "no". The usual problem is to explain that we want a "free license" not just "permission" - very few people understand the distinction, and going by some of the answers to our boilerplate letters, they didn't read the letter that closely...
The Free Software Foundation solves this for their software by making every would-be contributor physically sign two pages of legalese - along with a VP of the contributor's employer if it's a computer-related company - and keeping all those in a file cabinet. This all seemed like a ridiculous procedure until free software started putting proprietary companies out of business, now it's a key bulwark against legal attack by the remaining companies.
Stan