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Wikimedia Commons – National Portrait Gallery – Bleak House 2.0

National Portrait Gallery London
The National Portrait Gallery in London, NPG, is currently in legal dispute with the Wikimedia Commons and a user who scraped 3000 images from the NPG web site and put them up on Wikimedia Commons, here. The claim is that as the works are all 19th century or earlier they are all in the public domain, and so available for fair use.

In turn, the NPG is demanding their removal, claiming the images are a ‘product of a painstaking exercise on the part of the photographer,’ and that downloading them off the NPG site is an ‘unlawful circumvention of technical measures.’ See full legal stance, here

Slashdot
Part of the merits of the relative positions of the parties is around which jurisdiction – USA – or UK the dispute would lie. Slashdot has the detail, here, plus a whole bunch of opinions on the relative merits.

Education – Fair Use – commercial gain?
The story raises some really interesting issues around online curatorial practice. The NPG like most big cultural institutions face the ongoing struggle to reconcile their commercial/fund raising imperatives with their equally compelling obligations for education/scholarly research/ online public good.

This dispute seems to throw this balance in sharp focus – after all what is the point of trying to hold back these images for teaching – research – or cultural use?

Indeed, as the Flickr Commons project has demonstrated, doesn’t sharing image sets from key institutions enlarge the notion of a digital cultural/civic space? And in the process extend and enhance the global audience and reach of the collections?

And if none of the above applies to the NPG – then what is their rational for this immediate reach for the legal gun?

Follow the Money
Far be it for me to stir the flames – but is the old jouro saw “follow the money” of use here? See for example this draft rate card which clearly articulates what the NPG think is reasonable to charge for the use of their images on the web. See here, [PDF]
Or see the extract below.

Web use
Just to confirm what is at stake here, I do mean web use – there are a whole bunch of different fees for books – TV, and in a curious, albeit charming reach back to the future, separate rates again for CD and DVD. Also note the precision – different rates for home page – inside the site – central position / secondary position.

US$437,000.
By my calculation if you define Wikimedia Commons as being aimed at the domestic user – the NPG could claim, @ 18UK pounds an image, a combined loss of UK54,000 pounds – or US$87,562 [#].

If you take the higher ground of academia, then, when used in the front of a web site, the combined value of these images, according to the NPG @90 pounds an image, is UK270,000.
Or if you prefer, US$437,000.

Bleak House 2.0
Astute commercial logic? Fools gold? Madness on stilts? You choose.

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