This is some gray area about fair use and some benefit of doubt can be given to media.
But what the Attribution required clause? Almost all of the media violate the "Attribution required" clause all the time.
-Sudhanwa
On Fri, Dec 23, 2011 at 10:09 PM, Arun Ganesh arun.planemad@gmail.com wrote:
I dug up the Indian fair use law and found this: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:WikiProject_India/Fair_use#reproducti...
In this case, the aircraft had crashed and it was no longer possible to get such a photograph, but can a newspaper otherwise just pick up any photo off the internet and use it under fair use clause just to avoid paying licensing fees of the photograph?
-arun
On Fri, Dec 23, 2011 at 9:50 PM, Gautam John gautam@prathambooks.org wrote:
On 23 December 2011 21:43, Srikanth Ramakrishnan parakara.ghoda@gmail.com wrote:
Gautam, thank you for correcting me, but I believe Digitally Stealing is also defined as Using Data Without Permission. Atleast that's the definition Microsoft uses for their Windows Genuine campaign. Forgive me if I'm wrong.
Since when did Microsoft become the arbiter of all that is sacred in copyright law? :)
Thank you.
Best,
Gautam ________ http://blog.prathambooks.org/p/social-media.html
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