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Bulletins Story:
VISUAL SEARCH ENGINES AND “FAIR USE”: LESLIE KELLY v ARRIBA
SOFT CORP
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Date: 13.02.2002
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The US Court of Appeals has issued its decision in the long
running battle between the photographer Leslie Kelly and the
Ditto.com visual search engine. The reproduction of Kelly’s
images in the form of thumbnails is “fair use” and does not
infringe copyright, but the display of full-sized images was not a
fair use and infringed Kelly’s exclusive right to publicly display
his copyright works.
Ditto.com indexes millions of images on the Internet by means of
automated web-crawling technology. The search facility
displays thumbnail images which match the search word. By
clicking on a thumbnail the user could then view a large version of
the same picture. This was done at various times by means of
either “inline linking” or “framing”.
Inline linking involved importing the image from the web site
where it resided, surrounded by Ditto.com’s text and advertising as
though it were part of the Ditto.com site. Framing involved
displaying in a window the full-sized image imported directly from
the originating web site.
The decision is important not merely in the context of visual
search engines but more generally. According to the judgment,
no cases in the US had previously addressed the issue of whether
inline linking or framing infringe a copyright owner’s public
display rights. The situation in the light of the Ditto.com
decision appears to be that this kind of activity will normally
infringe copyright in the United States. However, although
Ditto.com’s fair use defence failed on this aspect of the claim,
there may be other situations where the defence would be
available.
The Ditto.com decision has little direct bearing on the UK legal
position because the principles of copyright law involved are
different. The US doctrine of fair use is much broader than
the UK fair dealing rules and the public display of artistic works
is not an activity controlled under UK copyright law.
Charlie Swan
13 February 2002
108
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