ChatterBank1 min ago
I need advice from a professional photographer
7 Answers
Our local newspaper invites the public to send in photos of anything to do with the past, and I have one that I took, that I would like to submit. Normally, members of the public can order photos that have been published (for a fee) in the newspaper. What happens if the photo was not taken by their photographer but was submitted by me (by Jpeg). My question is, would the public be able to buy it (and do the paper get the money?). How do I copyright a photo, so that they can publish it, but can't resell copies it to the public?
Answers
You already own the copyright to any photograph taken by you (unless it was taken in the course of your employment, in which case your employer would own the copyright). There is no need (and, indeed, no method) for registering that copyright. By submitting your photograph to the newspaper (when no offer of payment has been made) you're clearly granting the...
22:23 Fri 15th Jul 2011
You already own the copyright to any photograph taken by you (unless it was taken in the course of your employment, in which case your employer would own the copyright). There is no need (and, indeed, no method) for registering that copyright.
By submitting your photograph to the newspaper (when no offer of payment has been made) you're clearly granting the newspaper the right to publish that photograph without payment. However the copyright remains with you and the newspaper can't provide copies to other people without your permission. (Our local rag put a reference number against their own photos, so that copies can be ordered. But photographs like yours are simply labelled as 'contributed').
Chris
By submitting your photograph to the newspaper (when no offer of payment has been made) you're clearly granting the newspaper the right to publish that photograph without payment. However the copyright remains with you and the newspaper can't provide copies to other people without your permission. (Our local rag put a reference number against their own photos, so that copies can be ordered. But photographs like yours are simply labelled as 'contributed').
Chris
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