This is my first post on this blog, and I would like to dedicate
it to the memories of the people who lost their lives yesterday in the terrorist
attack in Paris, journalists, workers, and police officers.
This tragedy reminded me why I first became interested in
copyright: because I love to read books and to read the press. When I was a
kid, I read the adventures of the Grand Duduche, a comics created by Cabu, who
was assassinated yesterday and later delighted watching Cabu live on French television
on Wednesday afternoons, drawing cartoons following the enthusiastic suggestions
of kids in the studio. Much later, I started reading Charlie Hebdo, and found Cabu
there again, along with other cartoonists. The articles and the cartoons in the
journal were often outrageous, but always thoughtfully written or drawn and forced
the reader to have an opinion.
Writings are protected by copyright and they are also
protected by freedom of speech. This is why a recent U.S. bill, H.R. 5893, is
worth noting today. It is a bill “To Restore the First Amendment Rights of
Photographers” which was introduced by Rep. Stockman (R-Tex.) on January 2. Its
short name is the “Ansel Adams Act,” as an homage to the photographer who took many pictures of U.S. parks.
H.R. 5893 first reminds that photographers have been threatened in recent years with seizure and
forfeiture of their equipment and even have been arrested or threatened to be
arrested when on Federal lands and spaces. However, no federal law allows such
action. The bill states that these arrests violate freedom of speech and of the
press protected by the First Amendment, as “[s]till and motion photographs are
speech.”
The bill would oblige federal agencies wishing to restrict
photography of its installations or personnel to first obtain a court order
outlining the national security or others reasons for the restriction. The
court order could, however, allow restrictions of photography if it “may lead
to the endangerment of public safety or national security.”
The Act would also prohibit any federal agency to require
fees, permits or insurance from photographers wanting to take still or moving
images on “Federal Lands, National Parks and Forests, and public spaces,
whether for private, media, or commercial use.” It would also prohibit officers
to take equipment from the photographers nor could the photographers be ordered to
erase the contents of a camera or memory card.
The current Rules and Regulations of the National Parks already
states that “[v]isitors [which] are engaged in filming/photography intended for
their personal use and enjoyment” are “generally” not required to have a
permit. This policy would extend to commercial photographers under the bill,
which is not necessarily good policy, as the national parks may need the fees
for their maintenance.
The bill has been referred to the Committee on Oversight and
Government Reform.
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