I have emailed the culture department, pointed them at the legal threat, and asked a few questions and for a statement on this.
Brian.
-----Original
Message-----
From: wikimediauk-l-bounces@lists.wikimedia.org
[mailto:wikimediauk-l-bounces@lists.wikimedia.org] On Behalf Of Sam Blacketer
Sent: 11 July 2009 12:23
To:
wikimediauk-l@lists.wikimedia.org
Subject: Re: [Wikimediauk-l]
[Foundation-l] About that "sue and be damned"to the National Portrait
Gallery ...
On Sat, Jul 11, 2009 at 11:43 AM, David Gerard <dgerard@gmail.com> wrote:
In fact, the more legal
success they have with this approach (and they
do have a plausible cause in the UK, if they throw enough money at
arguing so), the more *utterly radioactive* the publicity for them
will be.
I’ll be calling the NPG first thing Monday (in my capacity as “just a
blogger on Wikimedia-related topics”) to establish just what they
think they’re doing here. Other WMF bloggers and, if interested,
journalists may wish to do the same, to establish what their
consistent response is.
What they think they're doing is protecting their revenue. I've just
posted on commons explaining where I think the NPG are coming from. To cut a
long story short, they are a non-profit making gallery and licensing
reproductions makes them a sizable annual income. They are also key members of
a group which co-ordinates other UK museums and galleries on copyright law.
They can't just decide to give up this case; they will fight it, if needs be,
in court.
Expect the NPG to argue that allowing WMF to host reproductions would, in
effect, extend Bridgeman v Corel worldwide, thereby depriving galleries of a
significant income from reproduction fees - income which would not therefore be
available to fund restoration of pictures etc. They are also likely to say that
the result would probably be that galleries would be unable to afford to run
websites containing reproductions, so it would actually diminish public access.
I doubt that the media battle will be one-sided. The NPG has a large number of
influential friends.
--
Sam Blacketer