In a message dated 1/13/2009 5:40:22 PM Pacific Standard Time,  
mor...@gmail.com writes:

We were,  I thought, talking of photos that Corbis does not own the
rights to and  never did, and is certainly not the creator  of.>>


---------------------------------
If I take a photo of your photo, I own the photo that I created.  As  does 
Corbis.
If they scan, upload, duplicate, xerox, or in any other way, create a new  
physical item, even if it's an exact copy of some other item, they own that new 
 
item.
 
You should not ethically use their item, without crediting them.
That is not the same as a copyright, and just because you make a copy  
doesn't mean you create a new copyright to that copy.  It certainly has no  
bearing 
whatsoever on the state of the original item.
 
If someone wants to use a Corbis created copy, simply because it's easier  
than trying to find another copy of that same thing, that Corbis didn't create, 
 
then that's their problem for being lazy.
 
That doesn't however prevent anyone from linking to that image, describing  
it, or using it under fair use.
However to simply take the image, use it, and neither give them credit, nor  
state it was even from a Corbis repository would not be ethical.  However I  
see no problem with adding a link and saying "Here's a picture that Corbis  
copied, from a public source, showing President Bush eating a hot dog".
 
Convenience links don't mean "use it however you want".  They mean  "use it 
but try to be fair to us".
 
Will Johnson
 
 
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