
China's Largest Image Provider Suspends Site After Falsely Claiming Copyright On 'Black Hole' Photo (reuters.com) 29
An anonymous reader quotes Reuters:
China's largest stock images provider, Visual China Group, shut its website and apologized on Friday after it falsely claimed copyright of images such as the first photo of a black hole and China's national flag. The company, which partners with U.S. photo agency Getty Images, said in a post on its official Weibo account the incident revealed its weak management and that it was cooperating with authorities investigating the matter. Shares in the company slumped by the maximum 10 percent allowed. The topic "Visual China apologises" was among the most-read items on China's Twitter-like Weibo platform on Friday, with over 250 million views...
The country's leaders have pledged to do more to protect intellectual property rights amid complaints by the United States and other key trading partners about the theft of such assets. Elliot Papageorgiou, the Shanghai-based head of the IP practice at law firm Clyde & Co., said Visual China's use of the black hole image was embarrassing due to the photo's high profile. "It comes at an inconvenient time because China is trying hard to get recognition for some positive steps it is taking to protect intellectual property," he said.
The company had claimed to have received authorization for using the photo -- though not for commercial purposes -- from the European Southern Observatory. But today the government-owned China Daily newspaper notes that "The European Southern Observatory, responding to questions from the National Business Daily in an email, said Visual China never contacted it for any purpose regarding the image. It said Visual China did not need to ask for authorization to reproduce the image provided the credit was clear and visible, but 'the behavior of using the so-called authorization as a copyright to sell the image in China and profit from it is illegal...'"
"The official accounts of many large companies, including Baidu, Phoenix News Media, major retailer Suning and Qihoo 360, an internet security company, also left comments about having found their logos on Visual China with a copyright claim."
The country's leaders have pledged to do more to protect intellectual property rights amid complaints by the United States and other key trading partners about the theft of such assets. Elliot Papageorgiou, the Shanghai-based head of the IP practice at law firm Clyde & Co., said Visual China's use of the black hole image was embarrassing due to the photo's high profile. "It comes at an inconvenient time because China is trying hard to get recognition for some positive steps it is taking to protect intellectual property," he said.
The company had claimed to have received authorization for using the photo -- though not for commercial purposes -- from the European Southern Observatory. But today the government-owned China Daily newspaper notes that "The European Southern Observatory, responding to questions from the National Business Daily in an email, said Visual China never contacted it for any purpose regarding the image. It said Visual China did not need to ask for authorization to reproduce the image provided the credit was clear and visible, but 'the behavior of using the so-called authorization as a copyright to sell the image in China and profit from it is illegal...'"
"The official accounts of many large companies, including Baidu, Phoenix News Media, major retailer Suning and Qihoo 360, an internet security company, also left comments about having found their logos on Visual China with a copyright claim."
IMO (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
Refreshing that a company would hold up it's hands and say they screwed up badly, although I do wonder if they were lent on by the government for this embarrassing incident.
Give and take (Score:4, Insightful)
I'm shocked, shocked. (Score:3)
It's funny how the people who attempt to outright seize control of the creative works of others are always so enthusiastic about insisting that the ones who make clandestine copies but don't even try to dispute ownership are the 'pirates'.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: American sites like Getty did this many times. (Score:2)
I honestly can't tell if this is parody or serious. I suspect serious.
China tried to sell a free, copyrighted image. (Score:2)
Who knew Communists were such Capitalists. :-)
Well, it was educational (Score:2)
At least with this breaking, I noticed that VCG had purchased 500px. All my best pics on a site they own, that'll go well!
So deleted the 500px account, and I was going to look through theirs to see if anything on mine was was out there...
China: RED DANGER (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
... Cold War feelings, all over again!
You win the non sequitur award for this week.
Re: (Score:2)
Positive Steps? (Score:2)
Considering that 'China' is effectively synonymous with 'IP theft' of all kinds, from hand bags to industrial equipment, I can say that I am not even remotely surprised by this photo debacle, and if China really is taking positive steps, it's completely unnoticeable because of the great big hole they dug themselves into.