The monkey selfie: copyright lessons for originality in photographs and internet jurisdiction

In 2011, a macaque monkey used a camera belonging to British photographer David Slater in Indonesia to take a self-portrait. The selfie picture became famous worldwide after it was published in the British media. In 2014 Slater sent a removal request to Wikimedia Commons, which indicated that the pi...

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Main Author: Andrés Guadamuz
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Alexander von Humboldt Institute for Internet and Society 2016-03-01
Series:Internet Policy Review
Online Access:https://policyreview.info/node/398
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spelling doaj-c91927d7dade4250a3cfdb0714e0b9b22020-11-25T02:38:25ZengAlexander von Humboldt Institute for Internet and SocietyInternet Policy Review2197-67752016-03-01Volume 5Issue 110.14763/2016.1.398The monkey selfie: copyright lessons for originality in photographs and internet jurisdictionAndrés Guadamuz0University of SussexIn 2011, a macaque monkey used a camera belonging to British photographer David Slater in Indonesia to take a self-portrait. The selfie picture became famous worldwide after it was published in the British media. In 2014 Slater sent a removal request to Wikimedia Commons, which indicated that the picture was in the public domain because it had been taken by the monkey and animals cannot own copyright works. While most of the legal analysis so far has been centred around US law, this article takes a completely different approach. Re-assessing jurisdictional issues, I examine the case from a UK and European perspective. The monkey selfie is of importance to internet policy: it has a lot to teach us about online jurisdiction. Under current originality rules, David Slater has a good copyright claim for ownership of the picture.https://policyreview.info/node/398
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Andrés Guadamuz
spellingShingle Andrés Guadamuz
The monkey selfie: copyright lessons for originality in photographs and internet jurisdiction
Internet Policy Review
author_facet Andrés Guadamuz
author_sort Andrés Guadamuz
title The monkey selfie: copyright lessons for originality in photographs and internet jurisdiction
title_short The monkey selfie: copyright lessons for originality in photographs and internet jurisdiction
title_full The monkey selfie: copyright lessons for originality in photographs and internet jurisdiction
title_fullStr The monkey selfie: copyright lessons for originality in photographs and internet jurisdiction
title_full_unstemmed The monkey selfie: copyright lessons for originality in photographs and internet jurisdiction
title_sort monkey selfie: copyright lessons for originality in photographs and internet jurisdiction
publisher Alexander von Humboldt Institute for Internet and Society
series Internet Policy Review
issn 2197-6775
publishDate 2016-03-01
description In 2011, a macaque monkey used a camera belonging to British photographer David Slater in Indonesia to take a self-portrait. The selfie picture became famous worldwide after it was published in the British media. In 2014 Slater sent a removal request to Wikimedia Commons, which indicated that the picture was in the public domain because it had been taken by the monkey and animals cannot own copyright works. While most of the legal analysis so far has been centred around US law, this article takes a completely different approach. Re-assessing jurisdictional issues, I examine the case from a UK and European perspective. The monkey selfie is of importance to internet policy: it has a lot to teach us about online jurisdiction. Under current originality rules, David Slater has a good copyright claim for ownership of the picture.
url https://policyreview.info/node/398
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