Commons:Copyright rules/Photographs
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Some countries apply special copyright rules to some or all photographs. The protection of such photographs may expire sooner than copyright proper, making the photographs eligible to host on Commons as public domain materials sooner than other works. In a subset of these countries, "simple" photographs are not considered photographic works, and thus they have a shorter period of protection than if they would reach the threshold of originality needed for a "photographic work". This page provides an overview and some guidance.
Note that simple photographic reproductions of two-dimensional public domain works of art are a special case: these are considered by Commons policy not to generate a new copyright – see Commons:When to use the PD-Art tag.
Overview[edit]
There are three basic cases:
- Countries that use the threshold of originality to make the distinction. If a photo fails this threshold, it is a "simple photograph", otherwise it is a "photographic work". Such countries place simple photographs, even though they are deemed non-original, under a special protection term.
- Countries that place all photographs, or photographs that satisfy some other criteria, under a special protection term.
- Countries that do not make the distinction. In such countries, a photograph failing the originality test is simply not copyrighted, and any other photograph is a work and thus subject to the normal copyright terms.
Wherever the threshold of originality is used as a criterion, one should bear in mind that this is a subjective criterion. In some countries, basically anything passes this threshold, while others place the bar higher.
If the table below says the criterion was the threshold of originality or says that the criteria were unknown and gives no specific copyright term for simple photographs, this means that the law makes no special provisions for "simple photographs". In general, if the criteria are unknown, I think one should assume that the threshold of originality applies, as that's the general test whether something is copyrightable at all.
Because of the national treatment defined in international copyright treaties such as the Berne Convention or the Universal Copyright Convention (UCC), a photo that qualifies as a "simple photograph" in its source country may still be considered a "photographic work" in other countries that have a lower threshold of originality. The U.S. has a very low threshold of originality,[1] and it also does not follow the "rule of the shorter term". Because of this, "simple photographs" from non-U.S. countries may be under copyright much longer in the U.S. than in the source country of the photo.
Country table[edit]
Country | Distinction criterion | Copyright on "simple photographs" |
---|---|---|
EU countries | ||
Austria | If the photo passes the threshold of originality, it is a "work".[1] The threshold is very low, i.e. basically all photos are "works".[2][3][4] | 50 years since publication or creation, if unpublished.§73, §74 |
Belgium | The distinction is known art 2, §5, but only works that do not pass the threshold of originality are "simple photographs".[5] | Normal copyright rules apply |
Bulgaria | Not mentioned in the Bulgarian copyright law of 1993, with amendments up to 2000 | Normal copyright rules apply |
Cyprus | Unknown | |
Czech Republic | If the photo passes the threshold of originality, it is a "work".art 2(2) | Normal copyright rules apply |
Denmark | See {{PD-Denmark50}} and Category:PD Denmark. Distinction seems to be threshold of originality.[6] Applies only to photos of EEA nationals or people having their habitual domicile in the EEA.§86(5) | 50 years since creation§70(2), if created 1970 or later, none for older ones.§91(5) |
Estonia | If the photo passes the threshold of originality, it is a "work". No special term is mentioned in Estonian copyright law | Normal copyright rules apply |
Finland | See {{PD-Finland50}} and Category:PD Finland (simple photos). Originality criteria unknown. Copyright council has stated that this photo is to be considered a simple photograph. The Appeal Court of Turku ruled in it's decision 96/1304 that a photograph taken of a landscape did not pass the threshold of originalty. According to the decision, the photograph did not differ from photographs taken from the same place. Thus the photograph was not a result of original creation done by the author and the photograph was considered a simple photograph. Applies only to simple photographs either taken by Finnish nationals or people living in Finland, or first published in Finland §63(1), §63(2), §63(5), and §64, second-but last sub-paragraph | 50 years since creation §49a. |
France | Distinction seems to be threshold of originality.[7], [8] Minimal creativity suffices apparently, e.g. recoloring an image already gives rise to new moral rights.[9] | Normal copyright rules apply |
Germany | If the photo passes the threshold of originality, it is a "work". The threshold is very low, i.e. basically all photos are "works".[10][11] | 50y since publ. or broadcast or 50y since creation, if unpublished.§72 |
Greece | No distinction is made in the law. Greek copyright law | Normal copyright rules apply |
Hungary | The law only mentions "artistic photographs" [12]. Criteria unknown, probably threshold of originality. | Normal copyright rules apply |
Iceland | See {{PD-Iceland50}} and files using it. Criteria for distinction unknown. Applies only to Icelandic works.§60(1-4), §62 | 50y since creation§49Obsolete translation |
Ireland | No distinction; the law only mentions "photographs".[13] | Normal copyright rules apply |
Italy | See {{PD-Italy}} and Category:PD Italy (20 years after creation). The law lists exactly which kinds of photographs are or are not "simple photographs", and is rather generous.§87 | 20y since creation. §92 |
Latvia | Not mentioned.Latvian copyright law | Normal copyright rules apply |
Lithuania | If the photo passes the threshold of originality, it is a "work".art. 2(10) | Normal copyright rules apply |
Luxembourg | No distinction mentioned in the Copyright law of Luxembourg, therefore probably threshold of originality applies. | Normal copyright rules apply |
Malta | No distinction mentioned in the Copyright law of Malta, therefore probably threshold of originality applies. | Normal copyright rules apply |
Netherlands | No distinction mentioned in the Copyright law of the Netherlands (English translation at Wikisource), therefore probably threshold of originality applies. | Normal copyright rules apply |
Poland | See {{PD-Poland}}, which applies to all photos regardless of whether they are "simple". | Published without notice before May 23, 1994 |
Portugal | A "photographic work" must show an "artistic expression of the author". Photos of documents are not "works". Movie stills are photographic works.§164 The precise criteria are unknown. Since no explicit mention is made of "simple photographs", is it to be assumed that the threshold of originality applies? | Normal copyright rules apply |
Slovakia | No special provision for "simple photographs" mentioned in the Copyright law of Slovakia, therefore probably threshold of originality applies. | Normal copyright rules apply |
Slovenia | No special provision for "simple photographs" mentioned in the Copyright law of Slovenia, therefore probably threshold of originality applies. | Normal copyright rules apply |
Spain | See {{PD-Spain-photo}}. In general, in order for a photograph to no longer be considered "simple", it must be considered a work (obra) as defined by the Dictionary of the Royal Spanish Academy: any intellectual product in science, literature, or art, and with a distinctive feature of importance" ("Cualquier producto intelectual en ciencias, letras o artes, y con particularidad el que es de alguna importancia")[14]. Applies to works of EU nationals, residents of the EU, or works first published in the EU.art. 162 | 25y since creation art. 128 |
Sweden | See {{PD-Sweden}} and Category:PD Sweden. Criteria not defined by the law but supposed to be threshold of originality. At least news photos, where the photographer has not had an opportunity to preparatory work, ordinary amateur images and ordinary portrait photos are supposed not to pass the threshold. Applies to works of Swedes, residents of Sweden, or works first published in Sweden.§61. Before 1994 the criteria was "of artistic or scientific value" (1960:730, 15 §) | 50y since creation §49a |
United Kingdom | No distinction made in law, photographs generally are "artistic works" irrespective of their artistic merit. UK Copyright Act, §4 | Normal copyright rules apply |
Other countries | ||
Argentina | See {{PD-AR-Photo}}, which applies to all photos regardless of whether they are "simple". | 25 years from creation and 20 years from publication |
Australia | No distinction made in the Australian Copyright Act 1968, photographs generally are "artistic works" irrespective of their artistic merit. | Normal copyright rules apply |
Canada | See {{PD-Canada}}, which applies to all photos regardless of whether they are "simple". This template also covers some other PD criteria which apply regardless of whether the work is a photograph. | Created before 1949 |
Egypt | See {{PD Egypt}}. Photographs which "are not of creative character and merely consist of a mechanical reproduction of scenes." | 15 years from publication (prior to 1987 due to repeal of this provision in 2002) |
Japan | Apparently no distinction made in law. threshold of originality? Japanese coypright law | Normal copyright rules apply |
Liechtenstein | No distinction mentioned in the Copyright law of Liechtenstein, therefore probably threshold of originality applies. | Normal copyright rules apply |
Norway | See {{PD-Norway50}} and Category:PD Norway. Criteria unknown. Applies to photos from EEA nationals and residents. §58 | 15y p.m.a. or 50y since creation, whichever is longer. §43 |
Paraguay | See Copyright law of Paraguay of 1998, article 135. Also applies to earlier photos per article 181. Criteria unknown → threshold of originality. | 50 years since January 1 following the creation of the photo |
Peru | See {{PD-Peru-photo}} for Copyright Law 13714 of October 31, 1961 (article 27) → Photography for non-exclusive use in artistic and scientific works.
See Copyright Law - Legislative Decree No. 822 of April 23, 1996, article 144 and Resolution 378-2002/TPI-INDECOPI. Artistic techniques and distinctive features of the photographer → threshold of originality. |
20 years since disclosing(prior to 1976 under Law 13714, 1961)
70 years since January 1 following the creation of the photo |
Switzerland | See {{PD-Switzerland-photo}} and Category:PD Switzerland (Individuality). If it has an individual character, a photo is a "work". If it does not have an individual character, but is made by a human, it is protected for 50 years from the end of the calendar year in which the photo was taken (before April 1, 2020 such photos were not copyrightable). Automatically created photographs such as radar pictures, pictures from surveillance cameras or camera traps are ineligible for protection. | 50 years from the end of the calendar year in which the photo was taken |
Turkey | No distinction mentioned in the law. Article 2(3) explicitly declares "technical and scientific photographs without aesthetic merit" to be "works". Assume all photos are "works" in Turkey.[15] | 70 years since publication (article 29)[16] |
U.S. | No distinction made in U.S. copyright law. Threshold of originality applies, and is low compared to the level required in other countries to be considered a "photographic work", but high compared to other countries in general. | Normal copyright rules apply |
Gallery[edit]
Peru[edit]
- simple photos
Finland[edit]
- simple photos
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Simple photograph with limited copyright period – not a photographic work.
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Notes[edit]
- ↑ For protection of photographs. Compared to other countries, the U.S. has a relatively high threshold of originality for logos and text.