I have seen many pictures of cars featured in photography books and elsewhere with no mention of permission from the manufacturers of those vehicles anywhere in the credits. I once lent my car to an advertising company to make a commercial for Toro Outdoor Lighting. They featured the car, and put the commercial on TV without permission from Chrysler Corporation. This business about the calendar is totally absurd. Paul In a message dated 11/2/2003 5:02:09 PM Eastern Standard Time, StadtApoAchern@xxxxxxxxxxx writes: > > > I'm in brand business and have many brands myself > > Cafe press or beer press or tea press or milk press - forget! ... > Copyright means the right for YOUR personal work - if it is kind of WORK >... > 100%. POINT. > > Dietmar > 1960 fds > > > -----Original Message----- > From: mailing-list-owner@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > [mailto:mailing-list-owner@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx]On Behalf Of Christopher Hoffman > Sent: Sunday, November 02, 2003 10:11 PM > To: mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > Subject: Re: IML: CafePress and image rights > > Mark McDonald (tomswift@xxxxxxxxxxxxx) wrote: > > This is the heart of the question. What is their specific objection? > > Here is what CafePress says on their site: > > "NO pictures or photographs of products (such as automobiles or toys). Even > if you own a product, trademark laws still prohibit you from selling > merchandise featuring pictures of it. For example, you cannot take a picture > of your car and then sell t-shirts or mugs with that picture." > > I imagine this is to prevent someone from selling something that promotes a > current product, like a Dodge Viper t-shirt, without licensing the rights to > the name and likeness. Then again, this happens all the time, though few big > companies go after every little vendor of t-shirts and floor mats. > > It cannot be that they are so misinformed to think that it's illegal to take > a picture of anyone's car (yours or one parked in public) and then use that > image for your own gain. Everyone owns the copyrights to pictures they take > automatically (you don't have to register them, you can just claim the > copyright), unless one is working for hire for someone else, in which case > usage rights are usually negotiated beforehand. We do this all the time in > the car-brochure business with our hired professional photographers, and > it's amusing to see websites and car dealers use our shots without > permission (OK, maybe amusing is not the right word!)... > > Anyway, a picture of a classic car is not covered by the same issues (nor > any used car... otherwise you could never put a photo in a for-sale ad!). I > will contact CafePress on Leslie's behalf (with her permission already > granted) and see how they respond. I'll keep the List posted... > > Until then, perhaps we should hold off on the further discussion on this > issue on the List. > > Thanks, all. > > Chris in LA > > >