This post is not directly related to our issue but should be of interest to readers as it relates to recent intellectual property issues and may provide guidance on the Getty case.
(1) In late July, 2008, a federal court dismissed Tiffany, Inc.'s trademark infringement suit against eBay. Tiffany had sued eBay due to the number of Tiffany "knock-offs" sold on eBay's e-marketplace website. Tiffany had made two claims against eBay: that eBay directly infringed on Tiffany's trademark by promoting the sale of Tiffany products and by advising sellers on how to better market Tiffany products, when all the time these were not Tiffany products and secondly that eBay indirectly infringed on the Tiffany trademark by hosting the sale of Tiffany knockoffs. The court ruled that eBay's use of the Tiffany name and eBay's promotion of the sale of Tiffany items was a "fair use" of the trademark. But it is the court's ruling on the "indirect trademark infringement " claim that is interesting. The court said that since there was nothing about the proposed sale that would telegraph to anyone that the sale was of a knock-off item as opposed to an actual Tiffany item, that eBay could not be responsible for the seller's trademark infringement of Tiffany's name and design. The court noted that in every instance of a Tiffany knock-off sale, as soon as eBay was notified by Tiffany that it was not an actual Tiffany product being sold, eBay took the sale off its website and derogated the seller to a "bad seller's" list The court held this was sufficient conduct on the part of eBay to make it not responsible for indirect infringement. While trademark law is not identical to copyright law, there are parallels in the two areas. eBay's reaction to the notice from Tiffany is similar to many of our client's reaction to notice from Getty. They did not actually download the allegedly copyrighted image and took it down immediately once notified of the alleged infringement. It should certainly give Getty pause as to whether they will be able to get the amount of damages they seek.
(2) In today's NY Times, there is a front page story in the Arts section about DJ Girl Talk ( real name Gregg Gillis, be careful not to download the photo accompanying the article, it is from Getty Images!) who has released an album of "mixes" that are comprised of overlayed samples of songs. He claims it is a "fair use" of the copyrighted song because he uses such a small portion of it to create a new original work. I suspect that if push came to shove a court of law would find that it is not a fair use as anyone working in the intellectual property field know that most labels and producers spend a fair amount of time getting clearances and licenses when their recording artists want to employ or sample even a "beat" from another song. While this position may seem at odds with my position on the Getty issue, it is not - please remember that more often I am on the side of the artist/author trying to protect his/her/its intellectual property, it is just that Getty is over-reaching and over-charging and may not have the correct legal position. But what is interesting about the DJ Girl Talk issue is that the Times speculates that the music industry is cautious about bringing suit against the popular DJ because of bad publicity and the danger of setting a bad precedent. Well, I am sure that Getty is (and should be) concerned about similar issues here. They are already getting bad publicity from this and if a court agrees with my legal position should it get to court, they will have to stop this gravy train of demand letters and settlements. That may explain why no lawsuits have been filed even though they started this in 2005.
(1) In late July, 2008, a federal court dismissed Tiffany, Inc.'s trademark infringement suit against eBay. Tiffany had sued eBay due to the number of Tiffany "knock-offs" sold on eBay's e-marketplace website. Tiffany had made two claims against eBay: that eBay directly infringed on Tiffany's trademark by promoting the sale of Tiffany products and by advising sellers on how to better market Tiffany products, when all the time these were not Tiffany products and secondly that eBay indirectly infringed on the Tiffany trademark by hosting the sale of Tiffany knockoffs. The court ruled that eBay's use of the Tiffany name and eBay's promotion of the sale of Tiffany items was a "fair use" of the trademark. But it is the court's ruling on the "indirect trademark infringement " claim that is interesting. The court said that since there was nothing about the proposed sale that would telegraph to anyone that the sale was of a knock-off item as opposed to an actual Tiffany item, that eBay could not be responsible for the seller's trademark infringement of Tiffany's name and design. The court noted that in every instance of a Tiffany knock-off sale, as soon as eBay was notified by Tiffany that it was not an actual Tiffany product being sold, eBay took the sale off its website and derogated the seller to a "bad seller's" list The court held this was sufficient conduct on the part of eBay to make it not responsible for indirect infringement. While trademark law is not identical to copyright law, there are parallels in the two areas. eBay's reaction to the notice from Tiffany is similar to many of our client's reaction to notice from Getty. They did not actually download the allegedly copyrighted image and took it down immediately once notified of the alleged infringement. It should certainly give Getty pause as to whether they will be able to get the amount of damages they seek.
(2) In today's NY Times, there is a front page story in the Arts section about DJ Girl Talk ( real name Gregg Gillis, be careful not to download the photo accompanying the article, it is from Getty Images!) who has released an album of "mixes" that are comprised of overlayed samples of songs. He claims it is a "fair use" of the copyrighted song because he uses such a small portion of it to create a new original work. I suspect that if push came to shove a court of law would find that it is not a fair use as anyone working in the intellectual property field know that most labels and producers spend a fair amount of time getting clearances and licenses when their recording artists want to employ or sample even a "beat" from another song. While this position may seem at odds with my position on the Getty issue, it is not - please remember that more often I am on the side of the artist/author trying to protect his/her/its intellectual property, it is just that Getty is over-reaching and over-charging and may not have the correct legal position. But what is interesting about the DJ Girl Talk issue is that the Times speculates that the music industry is cautious about bringing suit against the popular DJ because of bad publicity and the danger of setting a bad precedent. Well, I am sure that Getty is (and should be) concerned about similar issues here. They are already getting bad publicity from this and if a court agrees with my legal position should it get to court, they will have to stop this gravy train of demand letters and settlements. That may explain why no lawsuits have been filed even though they started this in 2005.