Vapor
In response to recent developments in a lawsuit between pro photographer Elliot McGucken and Newsweek, Instagram told tech publication Ars Technica via email last week that it does NOT grant a sub-license to anyone who uses their “embed” feature to share a public photo.
The announcement most likely came as a shock to users who
believed that embedding images, rather than hosting them directly,
provides protection against copyright claims.
Said Facebook's
representative: "Our platform policies require third parties to have the
necessary rights from applicable rights holders. This includes ensuring
they have a license to share this content, if a license is required by
law."
In April, Mashable won a lawsuit against photographer
Stephanie Sinclair after Sinclair refused to allow the website to share
her photos and Mashable published them anyway via Instagram’s embed
feature. That prompted Sinclair to sue for copyright infringement; she
lost that suit.
According to Ars Technica, The Newsweek suit
centered around McGucken's rare photo of an ephemeral lake in Death
Valley that was filled with flood water. Newsweek asked to license the
image, but McGucken turned down their offer. So instead Newsweek
embedded a post from McGucken's Instagram feed containing the image.
McGucken
sued for copyright infringement, arguing that he hadn't given Newsweek
permission to use the photo. Newsweek countered that it didn't need
McGucken's permission because it could get rights indirectly via
Instagram. Instagram's terms of service require anyone uploading photos
to provide a copyright license to Instagram—including the right to
sublicense the same rights to other users. Newsweek argued that that
license extends to users of Instagram's embedding technology, like
Newsweek.
Despite the Mashable ruling, Judge Katherine Failla
refused to dismiss McGucken’s suit against Newsweek, saying that there
"wasn’t enough evidence to determine that Instagram’s terms of service
provides a sub-license to use every embedded photo."
As Ars
Technica reported, "Before you embed someone's Instagram post on your
website, you may need to ask the poster for a separate license to the
images in the post. If you don't, you could be subject to a copyright
lawsuit."
Ars Technica went on to say that, "Professional
photographers are likely to cheer the decision [in the Newsweek case],
since it will strengthen their hand in negotiations with publishers. But
it could also significantly change the culture of the Web. Until now,
people have generally felt free to embed Instagram posts on their own
sites without worrying about copyright concerns. That might be about to
change."
Source: www.rangefinderonline.com
Author: Jacqueline Tobin
Editor:Vapor