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Shutter Success: Prince Photographer Triumphs in Epic Copyright Battle at Supreme Court

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Today the Supreme Court announced its decision in a copyright case with major implications for the art and entertainment industries, ruling against the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts (AWF) in favor of celebrity photographer Lynn Goldsmith

The case centered around Andy Warhol’s use of a photo of the singer Prince as part of a silkscreen series he created depicting the iconic rock star.  In a 7-2 ruling, the Supreme Court upheld a lower court ruling that the AWF’s use of Goldsmith’s photograph was not a “fair use” that would immunize it from infringing her copyright.

Fair use is a doctrine enshrined in copyright law that promotes freedom of expression by allowing the use of copyrighted works under certain, limited circumstances without requiring the copyright owner’s authorization.  This case has been followed closely by many in the art and entertainment field because it has significant implications for creating and protecting copyrighted works going forward.  

This is the first art fair use case decided by the Supreme Court since 1994 when it ruled that rap group 2 Live Crew’s parody of the song “Oh Pretty Woman” was fair use and did not infringe the copyright.

Goldsmith originally took the photograph of Prince for Newsweek magazine in 1981.  Subsequently, Vanity Fair magazine commissioned Andy Warhol to create an image of Prince to be published as part of a story about the artist and credited Goldsmith for the underlying photograph.  Warhol created fourteen silkscreens based on Goldsmith’s photograph, most of which she did not authorize.   Goldsmith only learned of these unauthorized works after Prince’s death.  After AWF sued her, seeking a declaration that the silkscreens did not infringe her copyright, she countersued in 2017.  The case has been making its way through the courts since then.

Initially, the District Court found in favor of AWF, holding that it had made fair use of Goldsmith’s photograph because Warhol’s silkscreen had “transformed Prince from a vulnerable, uncomfortable person to an iconic, larger-than-life figure,” thereby satisfying the crucial “transformative’ requirement for fair use.  However, the Second Circuit Court of Appeals reversed this decision, holding that a “transformative purpose” must “at bare minimum, comprise something more than the imposition of another artist’s style on the primary work.”

Justice Sonia Sotomayor affirmed the Second Circuit’s decision in her majority opinion.  Agreeing that the imposition of an artist’s style was not sufficiently transformative, she focused on the specific use of Goldsmith’s photograph that she claimed to be infringing – the licensing of Warhol’s silkscreen image to Conde Nast.  She held that such use was not transformative because it served the same commercial purpose as Goldsmith’s photograph – depicting Prince in a magazine.

Justice Elena Kagan, joined by Chief Judge John Roberts, filed a dissenting opinion in which she criticized the majority for ignoring the creativity that had gone into Warhol’s silkscreens and basing its entire “transformative” analysis on the commercial purpose of the use (i.e., the license to Conde Nast).  In response, Sotomayor wrote that the dissent “misses the forest for a tree,” because its “single-minded focus on the value of copying ignores the value of original works.”

In this case, the decision represents a change in how fair use will be applied in copyright cases across the country, and the extent to which artists can incorporate existing works into their own work without incurring liability for copyright infringement.  It remains to be seen exactly how it will be applied and what effect it may have on creative industries.

The post Shutter Success: Prince Photographer Triumphs in Epic Copyright Battle at Supreme Court appeared first on The Source.

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Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson Will Balance The Supreme Court. We Need Morgan Harper Repping As The Only Black Woman On The US Senate

Morgan Harper

Morgan Harper is running for the US Senate to be the Ohio representative. Like Supreme Court nominee Kentanji Brown Jackson, if she wins the seat, she will be the only black female helming in a majority-white power structure. Who Exactly Is Morgan Harper? Morgan Harper is a 38-year-old African American attorney, community organizer, and political […]

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Supreme Court To Dismiss D.C. Sniper Lee Boyd Malvo Case

SLUG:ME/Malvo DATE:11/19/02 PHOTOGRAPHER:Rich Lipski TWP CA

Source: The Washington Post / Getty

The “D.C. Sniper” case rocked Washington, D.C. and the surrounding area in 2002, leaving 10 people dead and three others critically wounded. While mastermind John Allen Muhammad has long been executed, his accomplice Lee Boyd Malvo will have his case dismissed by the nation’s highest court.

NPR reported on the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision to dismiss Malvo’s case, who was then 17 and under the care of Muhammad. The shootings were part of an orchestrated effort to sow seeds of terror and demand millions of dollars under the cloud of a threat to the public. Muhammad and Malvo were arrested on October 24, 2002 at the Maryland highway rest stop after a widespread manhunt and tips from the public lead to authorities catching the pair.

Malvo challenged the life-without-parole sentence that was handed to him due to the fact he was a minor at the time of the arrest. Earlier this week. Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam signed into law a legal measure that will allow juvenile lifers to seek parole after serving at least 20 years. Malvo is currently being held at the Red Onion supermax prison in Virginia and could be eligible for a 2022 release.

While this might come as jarring news to many, Malvo may very well never go free considering he is currently serving four life sentences in Virginia, and six life without parole sentences in Maryland. The charges in Maryland are also being appealed by Malvo and his team, using the safe defense he used in the recent Virginia matter.

The outlet added that in 2012, the high court struck down the death penalty for juvenile offenders and declared mandatory life-without-parole sentences as a violation of the Constitution.  Five years later, another Supreme Court decision found that life without parole sentences for juvenile offenders should only be applied to the most heinous of crimes.

Photo: Getty

Source: HipHopWired.com

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Kamala Harris Calls For Impeachment Of Brett Kavanaugh After Sexual Misconduct Allegations

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Presidential candidate and current California Senator Kamala Harris is calling for the impeachment of newly Trump-appointed Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh after the latest allegations of sexual misconduct against him.

Sen. Kamala Harris took to Twitter to voice her concern about Kavanaugh’s appointment to the high courts, blasting his confirmation process as a “sham” after new allegations have surfaced accusing the justice of more sexual misconduct against a former classmate.

“I sat through those hearings,” she tweeted, referring to the Senate hearings after multiple women accused him of sexual misconduct.

“Brett Kavanaugh lied to the U.S. Senate and most importantly to the American people,” she added. “He was put on the Court through a sham process and his place on the Court is an insult to the pursuit of truth and justice. He must be impeached.”

Sen. Kamala Harris is the second Democratic representative and Presidential candidate to call for Justice Kavanaugh’s impeachment after he was hit with another accusation of unwanted sexual contact by a male classmate who said he witnessed Kavanaugh expose himself and press his genitals against a woman without her consent. In an explosive article published by The New York Times on Saturday (Sept. 14), the allegation was reported over a year ago but was not made available to the public until now. The article also reveals that the claim was reported to the FBI, but was not investigated.

Democratic presidential candidate Julián Castro is also for the justice’s impeachment hours after the report was published.

“It’s more clear than ever that Brett Kavanaugh lied under oath. He should be impeached,” he tweeted on Saturday night. “And Congress should review the failure of the Department of Justice to properly investigate the matter.”

Kavanaugh has denied all of the allegations he has faced, calling them politically motivated, but critics are pointing out that during his nomination process he faced similar accusations including the accusations of attempted rape by Dr. Christine Blasey Ford.

As of press time, Supreme Justice Kavanaugh has yet to comment on the new allegations.

Source: HipHopWired.com

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Killer Mike, Chance The Rapper & More File Supreme Court Brief About Rap Lyrics

Once again the Hip-Hop community is unifying to correct an injustice. Several MC’s are stepping up for one of their peers who is being held to the fire for one of his songs.

Billboard is reporting that an a-list roster of performers are giving the Supreme Court context on Hip-Hop culture. In 2014 a man named Jamal Knox who rapped under the name Mayhem Mal was sentenced to prison time for terroristic threats and intimidating witnesses. The charges were based on his song “F*** The Police” following his arrest for illegal gun and drug possession when he was a teenager.

His lawyer claims his First Amendment rights have been violated thus the case has gotten the attention of the Supreme Court. A caucus of rappers led by Killer Mike filed a brief on March 6 to give them a better understanding of how Rap lyrics can be misinterpreted. “Rappers also, in the tradition of African American vernacular, invent new words, invert the meaning of others, and lace their lyrics with dense slang and coded references that defy easy interpretation, especially among listeners unfamiliar with the genre.”

Other rappers that contributed to the document include Meek Mill, Chance The Rapper, 21 Savage, Fat Joe, Styles P and Yo Gotti. The full brief can be found here. You can hear the song in question below.

Photo: Kyle Blair/WENN.com

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Supreme Court To Hear Case Of Rapper Who Threatened Pittsburgh Cops

The Supreme Court of the United States

Source: Garen Meguerian / Getty

Pittsburgh rapper Jamal Knox found himself on the wrong end of the law after dropping a scathing song issuing threats against city police, leading to his conviction for making terroristic threats. With the state’s high court upholding the conviction, Knox is aiming to appeal the decision in front of the U.S. Supreme Court, which looks to be a tall order so far.

Raw Story writes:

Last August, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court upheld Jamal Knox’s conviction on the charge of making terroristic threats against two Pittsburgh police officers in a rap song he posted on YouTube.

Taking a page out of N.W.A.‘s playbook, he had also called his song “F–k the Police” and directed it at the officers, who had earlier arrested him and another rapper on drug charges.

So what did Knox say in his rap that was interpreted as a threat and landed him in trouble with the law? Here’s a snippet in which he names the two officers:

This first verse is for Officer Zeltner and all you fed force b—-es/And Mr. Kosko, you can suck my d–k you keep on knocking my riches/You want beef, well cracker I’m wit it, that whole department can get it/All these soldiers in my committee gonna f–k over you b—-es/F–k the, f–k the police, b–ch, I said it loud.

This may offend, but as the Supreme Court wrote in 2017, “speech may not be banned on the ground that it expresses ideas that offend.” For example, the Court protected the right to protest the Vietnam War by wearing a jacket reading “F–k the Draft” in a public courthouse.

The piece from Raw Story, written by Clay Calvert, director of the Marion B. Brechner First Amendment Project at the University of Florida, is a fascinating read. Check out the rest here.

Photo: Getty

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