215
PROTECTING YOUR RIGHTS
April 21, 1999
Many publishers are now claiming that the copyright law gives them the unlimited
right to reuse pictures and text that have appeared in their publications. They
base this right on the Tasini vs. New York Times decision.
At the time images are supplied photographers and agents need to be much more dilligent in
defining contract conditions in order to protect their rights and receive adequate
compensation for their work. Lawyer Robert Cavallo has
recommended a series of steps that creators should take to protect their rights by
contract rather than simply relying on copyright to protect them.
Robert M. Cavallo
There is a tremendous erosion of traditional rights in the new era of electronic
publishing. Contributors to electronic publishing should be looking for three
elements in their contracts:
- Fair compensation on the traditional advance and royalty
basis,
- In the event that rights are transferred to a 3rd party, not the original licensor,
such as a print
publisher, the author should be compensated by the original licensor on the traditional
basis with the author receiving 85% to 90% of the fee charged for the use.
- No use of the work should be made without the author's approval
of the medium, format and content.
As such, I am recommending that the following concepts be included in contributors contracts
when they provide works to print publishers who have no intention of publishing them electronically.
1 - Allow the print publisher to issue the work in electronic form to a third party only on
condition that the terms of the use be negotiated immediately prior to electronic
publication.
2 - Divide the proceeds of the licensing of electronic rights to reflect the print
publisher's role as an agent for the sale of those rights with 90% going to the
author.
3 - Retain the right of approval over all electronic licenses.
Where the print publisher is also the electronic publisher or licensor, the
following should be attended to:
1 - Grant electronic rights only on an advance and royalty basis.
2 - Grant the right to issue electronic versions of the work only in specified
existing formats, preferably on a non-exclusive basis.
3 - Retain control over any abridgement or anthologizing of the work and over any
illustrations to be added to the work.
4 - Unexploited electronic rights should revert to the author.
5 - Grant periodical publishers the right to republish an article electronically
only in the same format and context as the original article. This grant should be
non-exclusive.
6 - Insist that periodical publishers pay an additional fee at the time of the
electronic re-publication following traditional industry practice with syndication.
7 - Publishers should indemnify authors for all claims arising from illustrations
or other materials added to the author's works.
8 - The work should not be considered in print because there are electronic
versions of the work available.
9 - The publisher should be responsible for obtaining publication permissions in
electronic publications.
10 - Royalty statements should contain accurate records of production runs and
number of units sold and accessed, etc.
A photographer or author may not be able to get all of the things I have requested
above, but it is necessary to at least try.
Get it in writing!
Robert M. Cavallo, an attorney specializing in all areas of photography law is the
senior partner in the firm of Cavallo & Wolf, located at 400 Park Avenue, New
York, NY 10022.