[liberationtech] Snowden masks for Holloween?
Travis McCrea
me at travismccrea.com
Mon Sep 2 22:01:45 PDT 2013
I actually disagree... his ownership of his likeness is minimal. He is a
public figure and as such anyone who wanted to make a mask would be pretty
free to do so. I am not saying someone should go out and do it, and if you
do and get sued don't come after me... but if I had the resources available
and I thought this could make some money I would do it.
Travis McCrea
http://www.travismccrea.com
USA: 1(206) 552-8728 / CAN: 1(778) 709-4859
Candidate for the Canadian Pirate Party in the Vancouver Centre riding. Any
views stated in this email are my own and do not reflect the opinions of
the party.
On Tue, Sep 3, 2013 at 12:01 AM, Shava Nerad <shava23 at gmail.com> wrote:
> No one elected him and he may have volunteered for the spotlight but not
> in the same way that some one does when they campaign for office. Even
> movie stars have a right to their visages. Where you could say that a sign
> "We are all Snowden" is political speech, citizen Snowden also has rights
> to privacy and dignity, and commercial rights that he does not abandon by
> being a well-knnown whistleblower, any more than say Rush Limbaugh would by
> being a well-known radio personality. Just see how fast the lawyers would
> be layered on top of you if you tried to make Rush masks for Halloween
> without licensing on the basis of him being a public figure -- and he's
> been part of our cultural landscape far longer. Scarier, too. ;)
>
> SN
> On Sep 2, 2013 7:43 PM, "Paul Elliott" <pelliott at blackpatchpanel.com>
> wrote:
>
>> On Mon, Sep 02, 2013 at 05:44:41PM -0400, Shava Nerad wrote:
>> > Wouldn't there be a licensing issue? It's a hard argument that he has
>> no
>> > right to the commercial exploitation of his likeness on the basis of
>> being
>> > a fugitive whistleblower, and I doubt anyone is authorized as an agent
>> to
>> > grant that license on his behalf.
>> >
>> > We have these privacy laws about just using people's images without
>> > permission. They are a bit like copyright, but say you can't exploit
>> the
>> > subject matter without permission, for profit, with a few exceptions.
>> > (Face not recognizable, press reports on "public figures, " release
>> form
>> > signed,… ).
>> >
>> > CSJ ethics guidelines and EFF's bloggers' guides and Berkman's guide for
>> > media creators have good outlines for US law on this stuff.
>> >
>> > Also my union has a nice guide, the National Writer's Union (AFL-CIO)
>> > which I only mention because it's behind a paywall -- and also to
>> explain
>> > that since it's May Day… er...Labor Day here in the states, I am lazily
>> > quoting all this off the top of my head and making you verify and look
>> up
>> > the links. I am on holiday. ;)
>> >
>>
>> Is not Snowden a public figure? I am sure bush and obama did
>> not approve all the bush and obama masks?
>>
>> --
>> Paul Elliott 1(512)837-1096
>> pelliott at BlackPatchPanel.com PMB 181, 11900 Metric Blvd
>> Suite J
>> http://www.free.blackpatchpanel.com/pme/ Austin TX 78758-3117
>>
>> --
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>
> --
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