Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2001/06/18
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]By example, I can understand why The GAP wouldn't want their window displays photographed. However, we all would be upset if we couldn't photograph the Victoria's Secret displays, ehh? - ----- Original Message ----- From: "Rodgers, David" <david.rodgers@xo.com> To: <leica-users@mejac.palo-alto.ca.us> Sent: Monday, June 18, 2001 10:43 AM Subject: RE: [Leica] Copyright questions > Very interesting that you mention this. I've wondered about > architecture.....and even storefronts. > > A few years back I did a few portrait sessions in and around a upscale > shopping downtown mall. Inside is a huge skylit courtyard and a beautiful > fountain. It's a great setting with wonderful diffuse natural light. I > photographed there Saturday morning. Very few people around. The courtyard > was one of three locations within a two block area. I'd shoot a dozen or so > photographs at location. I was in and out of the mall in 10 minutes or less. > (IOW, this wasn't anything elaborate, not did it intefere with anything). > > One morning a guard came up to me and stopped me from shooting. He claimed > that all the storefronts -- window displays, etc. -- were protected under > intellectual property laws. He said it was unlawful for me to photograph > them even if they were in the background. I thought that was an odd reason > to stop me. Perhaps he didn't want to say that they don't allow photographs > to be taken in the mall. Tourists shoot away there all the time. It's a > popular spot. I called ahead to get permission the next time. The mall's > property management people told me no. They didn't gave me a reason. > > I've always been curious. Was it because they didn't want any type of > commercial photography in the mall? I can understand that. Was it an > intellectual property issue? Perhaps it was both, and then some. What I find > interesting is that the guard ignored me the times I used my Leicas. He > stopped me when I used my Hasselblad. > > Dave > > >>It is interesting to note that a relatively recent change in U.S. > copyright law > _explicitly_ prohibits architects from suing photographers for taking (and > selling) pictures of their buildings. In other words, in the U.S., it is no > longer possible for an architect to sue a photographer for copyright > infringement because the photographer takes a picture of a building the > architect designed without the architect's authorization and then sells it. > The > copyright law now explicitly states that this is _not_ infringement.<<