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Guardian left red-faced over "inadvertent" competition rights-grabThe Guardian’s Weekend Magazine has quickly reversed the terms of a Canon-sponsored copyright-grabbing competition and branded the rules “an oversight” after an outcry amongst both amateur and professional photographers. |
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2 October 2006
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In a statement the Guardian said: “The Terms and Conditions of the Guardian Weekend photography competition were out of keeping with our usual standard. This was an oversight on our part and from next Saturday they will be revised.” [Editor’s note: the revised terms have continued to cause controversy – read the follow-up story here] The competition, launched last weekend, and which takes up the back page of the redesigned Guardian Weekend Magazine, features around five themed images. The competition details were printed in tiny and difficult to read five point capitalised text at the foot of the page, and included the following clause.
The assignment of copyright would have meant that as soon as a photograph was entered into the competition the photographer could never use, sell or even print out a copy for their own use ever again. EPUK has been told that the new revised terms will take the form of a non-exclusive licence, and will not demand a waiver of moral rights. In future the terms will be listed on the Guardian’s website for ease of legibility, rather than in tiny print on the page itself. The launch of the competition featured work shot by professional photographers Mark Chilvers, Scott Chasserot, David Yeo, Mischa Haller and Franck Allais which had been commissioned specially for the page. The professional photographers were each paid just over £200 for the commission and were not asked to give up copyright. Mistake initially branded ’ a cynical move’The “In Pictures” section has replaced a half-page-sized “featured contributor picture”, which did not include a rights grab, did not offer prizes, and most professional contributors were paid between £100 and £400 for reproduction of the image.
As with the Opodo/Nikon competition, the issue quickly dominated amateur photographer forums, and seemed certain to damage the Guardian’s reputation as a newspaper which celebrates the best in contemporary photojournalism.
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Comments on this article:
I’ve been following this story on the Utata group on flickr.com. I’m very glad that reason has prevailed (or at least public pressure!) at the Graniad… I hope the Weekend picture editor gets a bit of a roasting for this absurdity. And well done to Dan Sumption for following through on his protest. Comment #2 posted by RC at 2 October, 03:38 PM Chloe, why are you whinging about how whinging this website is? Couldn’t you just keep a lid on it for once? Or go and read a different, less whingy website. It might surprise you, but some people get worked up over things like the theft of their work and the dismantling of their jobs. Now that’s something worth whinging about. Comment #5 posted by Dan Sumption at 4 October, 03:34 PM Chloe, Paranoid? Words mean what words say – especially legal terms in contracts. There is no other purpose to them, except to escape the equitable provisions of the 1988 CD&PA. The only possible motive is exploitation. If they were not there, there would be no story and no concern, and it would help ‘artists’ a great deal more not to be mugged by lawyers’ small print. If this is ‘whingeing’, perhaps consider sending a few hundred quid of your money to the poor victimised corporates who keep pulling these stunts. Somehow I doubt you will put your money where your mouth is… Comment #6 posted by Tony Sleep at 4 October, 04:07 PM Add your comments here:
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Glad to be of service :)
I see you quoted me twice in the article. Well, three times actually. “On Flickr one contributor wrote…” and “On the GuardianUnlimited talk board one commenter noted…” are both me – I also posted about this on Lightstalkers if you’re in need of any more quotes.
Also the quote which in the text is attributed to Flickr, in the pull-quote is attributed to the Guardian talk board (this isn’t wrong though. I wrote the same thing on both sites).
Comment #1 posted by Dan Sumption at 2 October, 02:05 PM