Re: 35mm Slide and Copyright Question
- From: "Ken Hart" <kwhart1@xxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Wed, 30 Jan 2008 18:23:40 -0500
"Crow T Robot" <spawn69@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:47a0f0fe$0$32067$88260bb3@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Just a couple questions
1. Are slides made from a negative? If you have the original slide can
you make a copy of it(I'm guessing yes)?
Well, technically, slides are made from a negative, but that negative is an
intermediate step in the reversal process and becomes the final slide. There
is no separate negative left after processing. You can copy a slide;
probably the easiest way would be with a slide copier, a device that
replaces the camera lens.
The copyright is owned by the person who created the original work, whether
2. The above question leads to the next question if you own the original
slide do you now hold its copyright? If so can you now do what you want
with it? Display it in a public forum but not make any money on said
picture or take any credit for the image?
it be a photo, slide, painting, book, etc. The copyright holder can assign
rights to another person or entity (business). He can specify what rights
are being transferred/sold/assigned. Just owning the original slide does not
give you the right to do anything with it, whether you profit from it or
not.
Disclaimer: I am not a lawyer, nor do I play one on TV.
.
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