[WikiEN-l] Re: [Foundation-l] Re: Copyright issues...walking on thin ice
Anthony DiPierro
anthonydipierro at hotmail.com
Thu Aug 12 00:24:38 UTC 2004
> Imagine the following scenario. I write a book, under traditional
> copyright. For my book, I license some images from you, under a
> traditional licensing scheme for such, i.e. you tell me that I can use
> the images for my book, only for my book, and for no other purposes.
> After the book has been published, I decide that I want to license a
> portion of the text to a magazine. Can you then object, saying that
> the text is now a "derived work" of the photograph? That the two are
> no longer separate and independent?
> I don't see how that could be so.
> Jimbo
It's not so, and it's tangential to the argument. Derived works necessarily
include the original work in them. To quote Galoob v. Nintendo, "the
infringing work must incorporate a portion of the copyrighted work in some
form." Just because the combination of an image with text is a derived work
of both the image and the text that doesn't mean the image alone is a
derived work of the text.
I think your argument that this falls under clause 7 is plausible. But case
law makes it clear that this aggregation is indeed a derived work (it just
might be a derived work which is permitted under the GFDL). Take a look at
Mirage v. Albuquerque ART. In that case it was decided that mounting plates
from an art book onto tiles was the preparation of a derivative work.
Anthony
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