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Getty Images wins 'plagiarism' appeal over lookalike photographGetty Images have won a landmark legal case after persuading a court that a photograph used in a high profile French advertising campaign was copied from one of its stock images. |
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16 November 2007
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An appeal court in Paris has ruled that a photograph used in a high profile advertising campaign for the French National Tourist Office Federation (FNOTSI) was a deliberate copy of a Getty Images stock photograph. While the court ruling is aimed at protecting photographers’ rights in their work, it also highlights the difficulties faced when clients commission photographers to shoot work based on existing photographs. The decision overturns a court decision last year where a judge ruled that since the central concept being pictured – a couple kissing – could not itself be copyrighted, there was no case to answer. The four-year legal battle case was brought by Getty Images against both FNOTSI and it’s Grenoble-based advertising agency Prisme after the tourist company published a commissioned photograph by French photographer Laurence Frappa which was so similar to the Getty image that even Ian Sanderson, the author of the original photograph, believed it was his when he first saw it. Scots-born Sanderson, 56, told EPUK: “It was irritating, as you can imagine, by the court case dragging on, when it was so obvious that [the Frappa photograph] was a rip-off, and a copy.” Original photograph widely publishedIan Sanderson’s photograph was originally taken for Athena in Paris in 1991, and shows a young couple on a fairground ride. The image, one of around 150 images taken by Sanderson which can be licensed through Getty, had been available for use through the stock library for ten years, and had also featured prominently on the front of one of their catalogues. It had also appeared on greetings cards, and was used by Getty on promotional postcards sent to French advertising agencies.
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