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#1
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Posted By: E, Daniel
How does this work? Are vintage baseball photos and their reproductions available to be used by anyone who wishes to, privately or commercially? Or are the photos/images the property of the original photographer or company that commissioned them? |
#2
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Posted By: davidcycleback
If you use an image from the Library of Congress site, they tell you what are the rights. As they are the LOC, they know better than anyone. Most of their old photos, including of Cobb and Honus Wagner, can be reprinted by average Joes. |
#3
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Posted By: Max Weder
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#4
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Posted By: Dan Bretta
I wonder if I could get away with making a Nebraska Indians baseball team T-shirt? |
#5
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Posted By: mike
As a long time lurker and 1st time poster maybe David can answer this for me. How can the 2 sellers on Ebay get away with buying old baseball yearbooks, reprint them and resell them without breaking copyright laws? Thanks, Mike P.S. Great Forums |
#6
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Posted By: davidcycleback
I don't know what yearbooks you are talking about, but copyrights might be being broken. Again, it would be up to the copyrights holder to bring a copyrights suit. Topps could sue unauthorized reprinters on eBay, though I'm not aware they have. You or I could not bring this copyright suit as we don't hold the rights. |
#7
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Posted By: mike
Ebay seller mtnmarv item number 190198641436, just one of many auctions of yearbooks reproduced from originals. Also Ebay seller gabbyheidi item number 320216659880, same thing all items for sale reproduced. Just seems like something illegal about doing this. Thanks, mike |
#8
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Posted By: Joann
Actually Dan, if you are looking for info or connections to these old players or their descendents, then making and selling T-shirts with the images might be the best way yet to flush them out of the weeds! |
#9
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Posted By: Dan Bretta
I've actually had one descendant - a granddaughter of a former Nebraska Indian player contact me for info about her grandfather. I had never heard his name before and have found nothing in my research, but she has a cabinet photo of the team with her grandfather in it. She found me through a google search. So the more I talk about the NI the more my name becomes linked with the team on the net. It pays to let people know what your interests are. I get a heads up on just about everything in my area of interest that pops up on ebay. For that I am gracious to all who put up with my incessant blabbering about my Nebraska baseball focus. |
#10
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Posted By: davidcycleback
The way people will get into trouble reproducing Yankees symbols or Mickey Mantle portraits is when they are directly profiting from the reproductions of copyrighted or trade marked stuff. If you sell unauthorized Yankees T-shirts, Brett Favre jackets or Natalie Portman coffee mugs online, you could hear from someone's lawyer. You're illegally making a profit off of someone else's image and name. |
#11
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Posted By: E, Daniel
for their knowledge. |
#12
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Posted By: Corey R. Shanus
What was said about 19th century photographs I think needs some amplification. While the original image is no longer protected by copyright, certain REPRODUCTIONS of them may be. For example, in Ken Burns book "Baseball" is depicted the daguerreotype of Cartwright with the Knicerbockers. I do not believe you would be able to make up, say, a business card depicting this reproduction of Burns. He has copyrighted it. You would have to find another image of the Knickerbocker dag that is not under copyright protection. Where David's point is most applicable concerns the owners of the original 19th images. They can reproduce to their hearts delight because they are basing their reproductions on the original images, which are no longer under copyright protection. |
#13
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Posted By: boxingcardman
(featuring nude models) was a fair use. Important factors: The Ninth Circuit considered Google’s use of thumbnails as “highly transformative” noting that a search engine transforms the image into a pointer directing a user to a source of information (versus the image’s original purpose: entertainment, aesthetics, or information). This transformative use outweighs any commercial factors regarding Google’s ability to earn money from placement of ads on the search results page. The court’s reasoning –that “a search engine provides an entirely new use for the original work,” — re-affirmed the principles established in the Ninth Circuits decision in Kelly v. Arriba Soft, see below (Perfect 10, Inc. v. Amazon.com, Inc., No. 06-55405 (9th Cir. 12/3/07). |
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