Tuesday 3 May 2016

Funny Video Monkey


By now, we’re all pretty familiar with the grinning face of the crested black macaque whose selfie sparked the internet’s favourite copyright battle ever. But let’s post it again just for fun … and also because, according to the US Copyright Office, we’re perfectly within our rights to do so. First, a quick recap. The monkey selfie controversy began when the snap-happy primate above got its hands on wildlife photographer David J. Slater’s camera at an Indonesian park back in 2011. The result? Hundreds of macaque selfies – but the grinning snapshot above was the one that launched a thousand memes and a sparring match with Wikimedia (the nonprofit behind Wikipedia).In a nutshell, Slater, concerned about lost royalties, demanded that Wikimedia remove the photo from its database of royalty-free media. Wikimedia refused: in its eyes, the macaque had pressed the shutter button and so the macaque was the rightful photographer … but since macaques can’t legitimately hold a copyright, macaque selfies belong to one and to all.

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