Monkey
cannot own copyright to 'selfie,' U.S. judge says
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[January 08, 2016]
By Andrew Chung
NEW YORK (Reuters) - A rare crested
macaque that took a now internationally famous "selfie" cannot own the
copyright to the photograph because he is not human, a U.S. judge ruled
in a suit brought by animal rights group PETA on behalf of the monkey.
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People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals brought the case in
September on behalf of the seven-year-old monkey Naruto against
British photographer David Slater, who self-published the photo in a
wildlife book.
Naruto, who resides on a reserve in Indonesia, took the image and
several others in 2011 using a camera left unattended by Slater, the
suit said. PETA argued he should be declared owner of the photos and
receive damages for copyright infringement that would be used for
habitat preservation.
While the U.S. Congress and the president have the power to extend
legal protections to animals as well as humans, "there is no
indication that they did so in the Copyright Act," U.S. District
Judge William Orrick said at a hearing on Wednesday in federal court
in San Francisco, according to a court transcript.
But Orrick said he would give PETA an opportunity to amend the
lawsuit before he dismisses it outright. PETA published the photo in
the case online at bit.ly/1V8Hnnl.
PETA General Counsel Jeff Kerr told Reuters on Thursday that the
group is reviewing its legal options.
"Although we are disappointed, we are celebrating the fact that this
is a historic case," he said. "For the first time we are arguing
that an animal can own property, rather than merely being a piece of
property himself."
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Slater, who said that fewer than 100 copies of the book have been
sold worldwide despite the publicity, asked Orrick in November to
throw out the case because, he argued, animals do not have legal
standing. "Monkey see, monkey sue is not good law," he said in court
papers.
Slater's lawyer, Andrew Dhuey, said that even if PETA can now amend
its lawsuit, Orrick will likely rule in his client's favor.
"My tuxedo cats could have won this case," he said. "It's not a
complicated situation. All that really matters is that the plaintiff
is a monkey."
(Reporting by Andrew Chung; Editing by Alexia Garamfalvi and Cynthia
Osterman)
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