President Obama Is Not Impressed With Your Right To Modify His Photos

from the copyfraud dept

This official White House photograph is being made available only for publication by news organizations and/or for personal use printing by the subject(s) of the photograph. The photograph may not be manipulated in any way and may not be used in commercial or political materials, advertisements, emails, products, promotions that in any way suggests approval or endorsement of the President, the First Family, or the White House.

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You may have heard that, over the weekend, President Obama released a photo taken late last week with him and Olympic medal winning gymnast McKayla Maroney, doing the "not impressed" pose If you're not up on your memes, you can catch up on the "McKayla Maroney is not impressed meme" here and here . The photo of the President doing the meme-tastic pose generated a ton of buzz , with the apparent story being that during her visit to the White House, the President pulled her aside and said "I pretty much do that face at least once a day."Cute. And, of course, nice to have a President not so out of touch that he's unaware of internet memes.Except... as lawyer Venkat Balasubramani quickly noted, the restrictions on use are somewhat questionable. Beneath the photo on the Flickr account, it states:This is, of course, not a new thing. In fact, we reported on this exact phrase on the White House Flickr feeds three years ago . As we noted at the time, there had been some controversy when the White House first started using Flickr in the early days of the Obama administration, as any Federal US government created work is automatically public domain. Yet, Flickr did not have a "public domain" license option. In response, Flickr actually created a special license to indicate that the work was a US government work . That license explicitly states that "anyone may, without restriction under U.S. copyright laws... create derivative works."And yet, the White House is ignoring what that license says in claiming that the photograph "may not be manipulated in any way." That's clearly untrue under the law and a form of copyfraud, in that they are overclaiming rights.But, in this case, it'sridiculous, since thethe "McKayla is not impressed" meme became so popular was the memegeneration of putting her displeased face into various other images.

Filed Under: copyright, derivative works, mckayla maroney, memes, not impressed, president obama, public domain, white house