PhotoRESEARCHER
PhotoRESEARCHER Newsletter
for October Week Three # 445C

KEY WORDS: | Copyright Infringement | Statutory Damages | Damages | Copyright Act | Attorney Fees | Blair Seitz | Digital Stock Photos | Stock Agency | Lifestyle | 300 dpi | Bob Pardue | Photo Researchers | Professional Photographers of America | Photographer Registry | Perfect Photo | America At Home | Edward Wallowitch |

 

 

NEWSWORDS: | How Do You Live, How Do I Live? | What’s In a Logo? | Do You Make The Grade? | Faux Grain Is Here | Double Honor | His Portraits Rock | A Good Spot for Wildlife |

 

 

 

Welcome to PhotoRESEARCHER Newsletter, a weekly newsletter from PhotoDaily, PhotoSource International.

Want to read back issues of PhotoResearcher Newsletter? http://www.photoresearchn
ews.com/

 

 

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Photographer Receives $60,000 in Infringement Case

Source: AdLaw http://www.reedsmith.com

A federal judge in New York ruled that a photographer was entitled to receive an award for copyright infringement from a travel website that ran his pictures without paying royalties.

Although the court found that the infringement had been “willful,” the court nonetheless declined to award the maximum statutory damages, which could have brought the total award to more than $600,000. Instead, the court awarded just more than $60,000 to the photographer. See Burch v. Nyarko, 06 Civ. 7022 (S.D.N.Y. June 15, 2007).

The decision in Burch appeared to be based upon the fact that the photographer did not provide evidence to support his claim for damages.

Robert Burch is a professional photographer in Quebec who owned the copyright to four photographs that he took in Ghana. Thomas Nyarko owns a travel agency named Black Star Travel and Tours, located in the Bronx, New York. Three of Mr. Burch’s photos were used on the first page of Black Star’s website, as part of a changing photo montage set to music. The fourth was used on the inside of the site.

Burch contacted Nyarko in June 2006 to inform him that he owed a fee for his usage of the photos, at which point Nyarko “became very agitated and began using abusive language, including a number of expletives, and concluded with the admonishment to ‘never call [his] office again,’” according to the court’s opinion.

The photographs were still on the website a month after the initial phone call from Burch. Eventually the website went offline. Burch then sued Nyarko in federal district court in New York, and although Nyarko was served with notice of the suit, he did not file a response to the complaint.

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Under the Copyright Act, a party may choose to obtain actual damages or elect statutory damages, the court noted. The statute provides for statutory damages of between $750 and $30,000 per infringing work, and allows courts to award enhanced recovery of as much as $150,000 per infringing work if the infringement was willful.

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Generally, “the total number of awards of statutory damages that a plaintiff may recover in any given action depends on the number of works that are infringed and the number of individually liable infringers, regardless of the number of infringements of those works,” the court stated, citing precedent.

In the case at hand, the court noted there were four infringing works.

To set the amount of the statutory damage award, the court stated that courts generally examine seven factors. These are: 1) the expenses saved and profits reaped; 2) revenue lost by the plaintiff; 3) value of the copyright; 4) deterrent effect on others besides the defendant; 5) whether the defendant’s conduct was innocent or willful; 6) whether the defendant cooperated in providing records with which to assess the value of the infringing material; and 7) the potential for discouraging the defendant.

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Burch sought $600,000 in statutory damages—$150,000 for each of the photographs.
He based his claim partly on the assertion that he lost $55,017.40 in revenue, the court noted.

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“This figure, however is unsupported by any admissible evidence, such as an affidavit. Instead, it is supported only by the invoice Burch originally sent to Nyarko,” the court stated.

The court acknowledged that “there was some revenue lost to [the] plaintiff, even if the record contains no admissible evidence as to the amount.”

“Certainly any award must be elevated enough to deter others from engaging in infringement and to discourage Nyarko from doing this again in the future,” the court continued. “In addition, Nyarko’s conduct—reflected in his refusal to talk to Burch, to remove the photographs promptly from the website, and to respond to this suit—supports a finding of willfulness…permitting an award of up to $150,000 per infringing work.”

Nonetheless, the court declined to issue an award that high, and concluded that $15,000 per photograph, or $60,000, “would be appropriate.” The court did not explain how it reached this lower amount.

The court also awarded $3,280 in attorney fees, which was lower than the amount the plaintiff had sought, concluding that the plaintiff’s counsel did not submit time records with enough specificity about the individual lawyers who worked on the case. “The fee applicant bears the burden of establishing the reasonableness of the hourly rates requested – specifically, by producing satisfactory evidence that the requested rates are in line with those prevailing in the community,” the court admonished.

Source: AdLaw http://www.reedsmith.com   

Tough Assignment? We Can Help!

Derek Fell
fellpix@comcat.com
http://www.derekfell.net 

 

Everything You Always Wanted to Know
About Finding
Digital Stock Photos Online

By Bob Pardue

How to Find the Digital Stock Photos You Want with the Quality You Need

Because there are millions of photos on the Web today, it’s important to know how to search for digital stock photos. You could spend hours, or even days, searching for the right photo!

Being specific is the key. Narrow Your Photo Search. Narrow your photo search to specifically what you need. For example, if you need a photo of a woman smiling and sitting by a computer, you can type any of the phrases below (or variations of these) into a stock photo search box or a general search engine, to locate the right image:

Phrase One: stock photo of woman sitting by computer smiling
Phrase Two: stock picture of woman sitting by computer smiling
Phrase Three: stock photo of woman smiling by computer
Phrase Four: buy photo of woman sitting by computer smiling

Or, you can add the word “photosource” to your description, if you’re using a general search engine such as Google to find stock photos.

Here’s an example:

medical doctor taking patient’s temperature photosource

The more specific you are the better.

Through a stock agency site, photographers are encouraged to put in as many specific keywords or key phrases as possible, describing their available photos. This benefits you because it saves time and effort when performing a search. Key phrases (as shown above) are usually better than a simple keyword, because they enable you to enter as many details as possible about the photo you need.

Consider these Search Possibilities:

*Color of clothes (i.e. stock photo of woman in blue shirt sitting by computer smiling)
*Location of photo (i.e. stock photo of man flying a kite on a beach in Miami)
*Lifestyle photos (i.e. stock photo of teenage girl sitting on couch reading a magazine)
*Scenery or landscapes (i.e. stock photo of mountain scene with cows and red barn)
*Animal photos (i.e. stock photo of Siamese cat with kittens)
*Color or Black and White (i.e. black and white stock photo of man flying a kite on a beach)
These are just a few ways you can narrow your search to speed up the process.

Finding Top Quality Stock Images

Most stock agencies require top quality for all their images, but if you’re searching for a stock photo through a general search engine, you might want to specify the quality, along with your description of the photo, to narrow your search.
Here’s an example:

If you’re searching for a stock image for your magazine cover, use the following

type of phrase in your search.

  • stock photo of baby wearing a pamper laughing 300 dpi
  • stock photo of baby wearing a pamper laughing high resolution
    If you’re searching for a stock image for your website, use a phrase similar to the one below:

stock photo of baby wearing a pamper laughing 72 dpi

A photo that’s 300 dpi and high in megapixels (such as 5, 6 or 10 megapixels) works great for printed projects in magazines, brochures, book covers and corporate newsletters. The dpi can be lower for Web use, however. So, the quality and size needed will depend on how you’ll be using your stock photo.

Remember to be as specific as possible when performing your stock photo search. Include quality and details about the images you need, and you should be able to locate the stock photos you need online without wasting hours of your valuable time searching.

Bob Pardue is a professional travel & teen lifestyle stock photographer. His work has been published worldwide. bob@bobpardue.com; www.parduephotos.com; 1 803 286 0320

 

 

Is This Your Picture?

Photo researchers, art directors, graphic artists and the general public often face the challenge of locating the copyright owner of a particular photograph or photographic collection.

The PPofA (Professional Photographers of America), along with a few other photographic associations, have proposed a (free) website called “PhotographerRegistry.com,” to provide a central resource to help in these searches.

The idea is to combat an almost insurmountable problem in the stock photography industry, of locating the owner of an obscure photo so that arrangements can be made (legally) for its publication of the photo. *

CAN IT WORK?

Keeping on the right side of photography copyright law has long been a sore spot for everyone involved, whether they be photographers, clients, or the retailers who are asked to reproduce professional images. PhotographerRegistry.com proposes to make copyrights easier to verify, by allowing photographers to create a contact listing that the public can search and by this means find them and contact them, to verify copyright ownership. The service will be free.

The PPofA proposes that a person need only remember one of the following to search the registry: the photographer’s first or last name, studio name, city, state, or Web address. Since the registered photographers would provide both current and previous contact information, consumers and retailers are expected to be able to find them even with outdated information. Participation in the registry is voluntary. It will be up to the photographer/studio owner or his or her heirs to create an account and maintain the contact information.

A PROBLEM

The idea of such a registry on the internet in the past has always turned out to be a haven for bots that scrape up information for other databases that sell or rent mailing lists. Just how this can be prevented will need to be answered for photographers and copyright owners who wish to participate in the registry. Perhaps the PPofA will figure out a way to overcome this hurdle. If so, such a registry would be an answer to the perplexing problem of seeking out and gaining publication permission for the photo researcher’s nightmare: finding the perfect photo – but not finding who owns it.

* For more information on “Orphan Works”: http://www.copyright.gov/orphan/

For more information about PPofA:

Professional Photographers of America (PPA)

229 Peachtree Street NE, Suite 2200

Atlanta , GA 30303-1608

404 522-8600

fax: 404 614-6406

email: info@ppa.com

www.ppa.com

Rohn Engh, veteran stock photographer and publisher of “PhotoRESEARCHER Newsletter,” has provided on-line targeted information for photobuyers, photo researchers and editors for two decades. No other newsletter brings photobuyers such up-to-the minute, practical intimately familiar with both sides of the stock photo desk. For more info: http://www.photosource.com/photobuyer/

 

 

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This week's featured photographer on PhotoSourceFolio:

Blair Seitz (http://folio.photosource.com/2819) ######################

 

 

We Specialize in Hawaii

Peter Hacker
PiEitsch Photographic Design
hacker.peter@t-online.de
http://ozimages.com.au/Profile.asp?MemberID=1113

 

 

Watch for developments in the field of stock photography in PhotoResearcher's Newsletter

PHOTOGRAPHY IN THE NEWS

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You'll be the first to know.

Note: If the URL is long, it may extend to two lines. In that case - clicking on it won't work. Instead, "copy and paste" the URL.

HOW DO YOU LIVE, HOW DO I LIVE? The launch of America At Home explores the way we live in the USA . Rick Smolan and Jennifer Erwitt. are in the midst of a grand project illustrating how different -- and sometimes similar -- private American lives can be. http://www.myamericaathome.com/?gclid=CID
t79mdgI8CFQWvQAodAgUjyw

WHAT’S IN A LOGO? The Art of Business: Logo Lessons - What makes you stand out in a competition? Eric J. Adams reports from the other side of the designer-client divide. http://www.creativepro.com/story/feature/25949.html

FAUX GRAIN IS HERE. TrueGrain for Mac adds grain to digital photos - Grubba Software has announced TrueGrain for Mac, an application that adds the black and white film grain look of classic films like Ilford HP5 Plus, Kodak T-MAX P3200 and more to digital photos. http://www.robgalbraith.com/bins/content_pag
e.asp?cid=7-8743-9101

DOUBLE HONOR. Camera couple secure top spot The husband-and-wife team are jointly the reigning Australian Photographer of the Year and Australian Illustrative Photographerof the Year. http://www.australianit.news.com.au/story/0,,225
50272-5013037,00.html?from=public_rss

HIS PORTRAITS ROCK. Sharp shooter …anton corbijn says he's not a rock photographer "I'm a portrait photographer who happens to like a lot of musicians," says Anton Corbijn. "Rock photography is all about who is in the picture. It doesn't matter how it's taken." http://www.nypost.com/seven/10072007/entert
ainment/music/sharp_shooter.htm

A GOOD SPOT FOR WILDLIFE. Minnesota Zoo named a top spot for wildlife photography Shutterbugs who like to take pictures of wildlife have a perfect place to do their work. Popular Photography magazine has named the Minnesota Zoo in Apple Valley as one of the top zoos in the country to snap shots of wildlife. http://www.startribune.com/462/story/1
464385.html

 

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Hard to find qualified photographers? They're reading our weekly newsletter, PhotoStockNotes. Reach them cost effectively at. . . http://www.photosource.com/psb

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## PhotoRESEARCHER Newsletter monthly newsletter is produced by PhotoDaily, PhotoSource International, Rohn Engh, Director, who is solely responsible for its contents.
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http://search.photosource.com


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ask for Lela LaBree
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Next Week: Moral Rights

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**********

## PhotoRESEARCHER Newsletter monthly newsletter is produced by PhotoDaily, PhotoSource International, Rohn Engh, Director, who is solely responsible for its contents.
For information about PhotoSource International:
http://search.photosource.com

PhotoSource International
1910 35th Rd
Osceola WI 54020
1 800 624 0266

 

Edward Wallowitch. His outstanding editorial photography inspired yours truly in the early 70’s to enter the field and begin selling images to book publishers. Wallowitch passed away some years ago, and his heirs have now decided to offer Wallowitch’s entire collection for sale, to a private collector, museum, or stock library. 3 of his photos appeared in the PBS TV series on Andy Warhol. For more information, contact John Wallowitch, 411 East 51st Street, #1 , NYC 10022 (212) 753-5748; wallowitch@juno.com – Rohn Engh

 

 

 

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David Hancock
David Hancock Photographer
photo@davidhancock.com.au
http://www.davidhancock.com.au


 


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Want to Invite Google
to Index your Web Page?

The search engine, Google, adds and updates new sites to its index each time it “crawls” the Web. Google invites you to submit your Web page’s URL. They don’t add all submitted URLs to their index, and they cannot make any predictions or guarantees about when your website will be indexed. But it’s worth giving it a try. To add your website: http://www.google.com/add
url/?continue=/addurl
.

TIP: Set up a blog on www.blog ger.com and post to it regularly. Mention various pages on your site from time to time. Create links to them too. Blogger is owned by Google and the links in your blog will get indexed quickly.

 

 

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Looking for “Non-Generic” photos for your next project?

You’ll find real-life photos at “PhotoSourceGROUP”. Click here for more details.

 

 

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LOOK LIKE A PRO when mailing your next print, ad, or disk: The “Way Less” envelope stiffener will not only create a high-tech look to your project but save you more than fifty cents in postage on an average mailing. (They pay for themselves!)

Made of extruded sheets of stiff corrugated polypropylene, the “Way Less” envelope stiffeners are lint and dust free, and unlike cardboard are impervious to moisture. Available in all popular envelope sizes. To learn more, order, or request a free sample, visit: www.envelopestiffeners.com.

 

 


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“You have been very useful and your newsletter has been an awesome resource!”

- Alexia Retallack, Photo Researcher, Sacramento CA

 

 

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PHOTOBUYERS!

Send us your photo need. You’ll find us at www.photosource.com/ On the upper right (white letters, blue background) click and fill out the form. ( No registration, no password needed…only your email address. Other options: FAX (800) PhotoFax (746-8632)

E-Mail: eds@photosource.com Phone: (800) 223-3860

Correspondence Attn: PhotoDaily/PhotoLetter Editor, Lela LaBree. PhotoSource International, 1910 35th Rd , Osceola , WI 55020

 

 

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Always Putting the Client First

Andy Long
First Light
firstlightfoto@aol.com
http://www.firstlighttours.com

 



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White Mailers

Sending a disk or slides? Look like a pro. Stiff white cardboard mailers are available at: MAILERS, 575 Bennett Rd, Elk Grove Village, IL 60007, Attn: Pat Pulver; http://www.mailersco.com/ . Phone: 1 800 872-6670. Fax: 1 847 731-2603.

 

 

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TRAVELERS ABROAD

Photobuyers: Watch this column. For the e-mail address, phone or fax number of the traveling photographer, call the PhotoSource International office and ask for Rohn Engh (1 800 624-0266). For an expansion of this list: www.photosource.com and press the Travelers Abroad button, to learn of past international destinations of our photographers.

Henry Westheim
August 22 – September 1, 2007
Philippines
September 1 – November 21, 2007
Taiwan
November 21 – November 25, 2007
Thailand

 

 

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445C

 

           


Dena Torgerson

Brad Freeman

Antonio Verahaus

Lacy Drinkwine