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Danny Cevallos says a photographer who wants Wikipedia to take down a selfie a monkey took using his camera has no legal claim to copyright ...
You have to feel for David Slater. In 2011, the British photographer traveled to Indonesia to take pictures of the crested black macaque, a snouty primate with reddish, somewhat possessed-looking ...
A monkey took a selfie three years ago and the Internet could barely contain itself.
If a monkey takes a selfie in the forest, does it own the copyright to that image? That's the question posed by the case of a curious monkey with a toothy grin and a knack for pressing a camera ...
Brave Monkey Crashes Tourists' Bali Vacation Photo for a Selfie "We had such a great time there and these funny photos made it even better," Judy Hicks said ...
If a Monkey Takes a Selfie, Is It Yours? Photo by Charles Sharp (not the monkey) The case of who owns the copyright to a selfie taken by a monkey — the monkey or the guy who owns the camera — has been ...
The federal body responsible for registering copyright claims has confirmed that a monkey — or any other animal — that takes a selfie doesn’t own the copyright to the photo.
Chloe and Craig Dennis were out in the Ubud Sacred Monkey Forest when they came across one of 1,260 Balinese long-tailed macaques native to the area.
A selfie taken by a monkey has ignited an unlikely copyright dispute as the camera's owner has attempted to have it removed from Wikipedia.
A selfie by a monkey in 2011 became a seven-year legal odyssey for a photographer, and now Hollywood wants to make it into a movie.
If a monkey takes a selfie with a human's camera, does the animal retain ownership of the copyright? That is a question in a case that finally come to a close this week.
People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) has filed a lawsuit claiming the monkey pictures owns the copyrights to his selfie.
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