Article Summary
(full detailed version follows the summary)
- What are copyrights, more importantly, what are your copyrights.
- Brief history of two online Mudi pedigree databases: MAB (Hungary) and TBA (Austria).
- Copyright laws in the EU, UK and USA provide very similar copyright protection for intellectual property that you have created which includes photos, videos, books, publications, documents, artwork, graphics, etc.
- There is a specific (sui generis) right granted under the Database Directive which prohibits copying of data from one database to another under EU database copyright laws, this concerns private and public databases, kennel club databases, both online Mudi pedigree databases, the original private database shared with the TBA database creator, and many other private and public data sources are also likely to come under the protection of the database copyright law.
- Copyright ownership can be difficult to identify, but that does not give anyone the authority to place unidentified owner materials anywhere that is accessible by others, such as on websites, or in a printed publication. You must contact the owner of the material you want to use and ask for their permission to use it, if permission is not granted, you cannot use the material.
- Visibly writing the source the photo was copied from, and/or the name of the photographer or document owner as the copyright holder on a website or publication, does not supersede acquiring permission of the owner.
- If you have requested permission but there is no response, you cannot use the material. The copyright owner has no obligation to respond to requests. No response equals no permission.
- If the copyright owner asks for their material to be removed, the owner/admin of the website or publication must remove it.
- The section of USA copyright law called “fair use” allows for usage of copyrighted material without the need to acquire permission for a few limited purposes which include news coverage, review/critique/opinion pieces, parody/satire, or ownership search. None of these “fair use” purposes apply to the TBA database, specifics are covered in the full text of the article.
- There are also four “fair use” determining factors for copyright permission exclusion. These four factors are covered in the full text of the post, with regard to TBA relevance, these four factors do not support copyright permission exclusion under “fair use”.
- The principles of fair use apply equally to every type of publication, whether printed or an internet site.
- The “educational purpose” use exclusion is far more limited than most people think it is.
- People that copy others’ materials for use on websites, confuse and mislead owners of photos, and other materials, with this excuse claiming “they have the right to use them under the fair use for educational purposes” exclusion.
- The TBA is a ‘for profit business’ that accepts payment through service upgrades and sponsorship levels and their stated purpose of business is as a “service provider”.
- The TBA’s taxable revenue generation and stated purpose being other than educational, automatically excludes the TBA website from the “educational purposes” copyright exclusion.
- The educational fair use guidelines apply to materials used in educational institutions and for educational purposes. Other nonprofit institutions can also be considered educational institutions under most educational fair use guidelines, when they engage in non-profit instruction, research, or scholarly activities for educational purposes. None of these apply to the TBA. Educational purposes are covered in the full text of the article.
- The TBA does not qualify under the educational use or purposes copyright exclusions as the website and business is not an educational institution or other non-profit institution, that engages in non-profit activities for educational purposes – TBA is a profit based service provider business. This means the TBA and its data contributors have no right to place your photos, documents or data, by claiming this exclusion, to their website without your written permission. You are well within your rights to demand they take your materials off their website and any other location you do not want your materials used.
- Other options to take back control of your copyrighted materials are provided in the full article below.
- Accountability is an important part of fair use. The TBA supports anonymity of its data entry participants by allowing them to operate without culpability, this makes information entered extremely unreliable, and without trustworthiness there is no value for this website or fair use for anyone. TBA refuses to be held accountable for what is entered. They openly claim no regard for correctness of information either.
- Anyone that copies others’ materials to any public location without permission now has a choice to make: continue to infringe copyright laws, OR do the right thing that acknowledges true fair use for all. Just because you can do something does not mean you are allowed to. Your choice will reflect your morals and ethics and will be seen by others.
- References and links are provided at the end of the post.
Copyright Infringement and the Mudi
(Full Version)
In today’s world it is very important to know your rights, and
for those involved in the Mudi breed realm it is no less important as your rights
are just as valid in all Mudi breed connected issues, as they are in the real
world.
Copyright refers to the legal right of the owner of
intellectual property (which includes photos, videos, printed publications, artwork,
graphics, and many other materials). This means that the original creators of
products, and anyone given direct authorization, are the only ones with the
exclusive right to reproduce the created material. Very simply, when a person
creates a product, they own the rights to it, this is copyright.
Copyright most often becomes an issue when your owned materials
are placed on websites, or in printed publications, without your authorization.
Even if you take a photo of a dog that
you do not own, you hold the rights of usage/copyright for that photo, even if
your name, logo, or watermark was not affixed, or was removed from the photo.
The existence of two online Mudi breed databases, as well as
numerous other websites and publications, has made copyright ownership an even
more important and controversial issue that you need to be aware of, IF the
usage of your materials by others is important to you.
This article concerns only some of the copyright issues seen
in the Mudi breed, it does not take into consideration any factors surrounding any
other breed, or dogs in general. Other
breeds have their own caretakers to deal with their issues, my concerns are
with matters that directly involve the Mudi.
While I am not an attorney, basic copyright laws are not so
complicated that an average person cannot understand them by making a detailed information
and knowledge search of qualified legal sites.
While I may not have hit every legal point squarely on the head (courtrooms
would not be filled with battling lawyers claiming their client is right, if
the law was not open to arguable elements from more than one side), I did my
best to present the current copyright laws accurately. Everyone is of course free to do their own
research, or consult their own legal counsel, to verify whether the information
I present in this article is indeed accurate, or how it might apply to their
needs or situation.
Mudi Pedigree Database Website History Basics
The Hungarian pedigree database, Mudi Adatbazis (MAB), is about
14 years past its’ start in 2010 although there is a new format and link
address, due to hacking of the original database late last year. This database
was created by a Hungarian and is mostly used and updated by Hungarians. The MAB is no longer accessible without
registration approval which gives each person a unique ID with log-in requirement
every time they want to use the site, it is however free to become a registered
user, this access change occurred at the end of 2023. This means the database is only available to
a limited amount of individuals, not every person on the planet that has
internet.
The other online pedigree database, The Breed Archive (TBA),
is operated by a business located in Austria, and just over a year old (originating
in April 2023). The TBA did not create
the database of individual Mudis itself, this website database was initiated by
someone living in Northern Ireland and is based on a private database that was shared
with this creator with the intention that the shared database would not be made
public. The TBA database is mostly used
and updated by those living outside of Hungary, with most being USA and UK residents. The TBA database is fully open access, there
is no need to register, anyone anywhere can see the contents.
While each database has its data entry participants,
supporters, and users, there are a few people that consult both.
Each database has its benefits, drawbacks, flaws and errors,
however those issues are not the purpose of this post, nonetheless, “caveat
emptor” is still critical when consulting any database.
Rights of Place
Even though the two Mudi pedigree databases are only
available on the internet, the owners responsible for them are located in
Austria and Hungary – both are EU countries. The people that support, use and
contribute to these databases are living in many countries around the world, however
the vast majority of the participants are in the EU, UK and USA.
Copyright laws exist in the EU, UK and USA and almost every other country around the world. For copyright infringement consideration between these nations, the use of the copied material must have occurred in a nation that has domestic copyright laws, or adheres to a bilateral treaty or established international convention, such as the Berne Convention and/or WIPO Copyright Treaty. The EU, UK and USA have their own domestic copyright laws and have also signed both of these agreements, meaning that the same basic copyright principles and laws exist in each country and each countries’ residents are subject to them. There can be expanded, amended or additional sections of copyright law that differ in one or the other country, but the same basic rules and regulations apply to all countries that signed the agreements.
GDPR also exists in the EU and can seriously affect the data
types allowed to be collected and placed onto any public site. But this is a more complicated topic for
another time.
There is however, one more very important bit of information
relevant to this topic, database copyrights. In the USA copyright protection
for databases is provided under the concept of a compilation copyright, the
protection for USA based databases is rather limited. However, in the EU, a
database can be protected in two ways. The first right is similar to the USA
compilation copyright. The second provides
for a sui generis (an independent legal classification) right that prohibits
the extraction or reutilization of any database in which there has been a
substantial investment made in obtaining, verification, or presentation of the
data contents, meaning, you cannot copy data from one database to another under
EU database copyright laws. This sui generis right granted under the Database
Directive applies only to databases created by companies based in countries
that are members of the European Union, which means EU companies have greater
protection for their databases than non-EU companies. Austria and Hungary are EU member countries.
This means anyone harvesting data from a private or public
database and placing it to another online public database is quite likely infringing
database copyright law, especially if the database is in the EU. This concerns any
private or online public database, including kennel clubs, both of the online
Mudi pedigree databases, the original private database shared with the TBA database
creator, and many other private and public data sources are also likely to come
under the protection of the database copyright law.
What’s Mine is Mine
Copyright ownership, for the purpose of this article, mainly
pertains to photos, videos, documents, publications, books, artwork, graphics and
data. Even though it can be difficult to ascertain where individual data and
other materials were procured, or find the rightful owner, it’s not always impossible.
There are also specific laws that cover
orphaned materials as well.
Although the MAB does have many photos of Mudis placed there
over more than a decade, it is no longer possible to know which ones were
allowed to be included on the site with permission of the owner, as the person who
placed many of them passed away unexpectedly in December 2022 and her records
are not able to be accessed. Therefore, if there are photos on the MAB that the
owner no longer wishes to have on that database, they have the right to ask for
them to be removed since permission is no longer verifiable. This article, however, is mainly concerned
with the placement of photos and data to the very recently created TBA database,
for reasons that will soon become clear.
While copyright ownership can be difficult to identify,
especially for very old photos and documents, that does not give anyone the
absolute, unquestioned authority to place unidentified owner materials anywhere
that is accessible by others, such as on websites, or in a printed publication. If an owner, their descendants, or their
legal representatives eventually come forward and ask for the photo or document
to be removed, the website or publication must obey that request. Of course, a royalty fee for use of the material
can also be agreed upon and documented between the parties involved
alternatively.
Also, visibly writing the source the photo was copied from, and/or
the name of the photographer or document owner as the copyright holder on the website
or publication, does not supersede acquiring permission of the owner, this
practice does not bypass permission procurement. And once again, if the copyright
owner writes and asks for the item to be removed, the owner/admin of the website
or publication must remove it. It is
always correct procedure to first contact the owner of the item in question and
ask for their permission to use it, if permission is not granted, then you
cannot override their denial for usage. Writing the name of the copyright
holder means you know who you should have contacted for permission and makes
you even more accountable to pursue and acquire written consent. And listing
the source where the photo was taken from is proof positive it was copied from
that source, but it does not make taking the photo from that source allowable
and it does not replace permission to use the photo.
If you have requested usage permission from the copyright
owner, but they have not responded, you cannot use the item in question by
assuming the copyright owner would not object, or that you made an effort to
ask for permission and that is the extent of your responsibility. The copyright owner has no obligation to
respond to requests for use of their material.
No response equals no permission.
Copyright duration, as a general guideline, for most materials
created after January 1, 1978, copyright protection lasts for the lifetime
of the author plus an additional 70 years. This is however a very basic guideline,
further investigation must always be done before considering any material as public
domain or orphaned.
Every photographer, material and data owner has the right to
say what happens with their material – where it’s used, when it’s used, and how
it’s used, and thankfully, there are laws that protect your right to do just
that.
Every Law Has Its Loophole
Since the USA has the most detailed copyright law
information available, and US residents are among the most active on the TBA
database, and they frequently cite US copyright law, it will be used as the basic
copyright law example that should exist in a similar form throughout the EU and
UK as well.
There is a section of USA copyright law called “fair use”. This
“fair use” section allows for usage of copyrighted material without the need to
acquire permission for a few limited purposes, these purposes include news
coverage, review/critique/opinion pieces, parody/satire (for example: Mad Magazine,
“Weird Al” Yankovic, SNL, Irigy Hónaljmirigy, etc.), or when
an author or owner of a specific material is being searched for. It’s easy to see that none of these “fair use”
purposes apply to the TBA database as it is not covering news, not giving content
reviews, and while the data errors are sometimes comical, lampooning for laughs
is not one of the stated purposes of the database, and lastly the TBA database is
not searching for owners of copied materials, nor is this a listed purpose of
their website, nor is it an appropriate place to conduct such a search.
There are also four “fair use” determining factors for
copyright permission exclusion, that must be considered when deciding whether a
use of copyrighted material earns the right of ‘no permission required’:
1) The purpose and character of the use,
including whether such use is of a commercial nature, or is for non-profit
educational purposes.
(This first factor mostly considers whether the use is
commercial or non-commercial and whether the use is transformative. Commercial
use is less likely to be considered fair use, non-commercial use is more likely
to be considered fair use. Transformative uses add something new, provide an additional
purpose or different appeal, and it is not a substitute for the original use of
the work. Transformative use is more likely to be considered fair use, not
transformative use is less likely to be considered fair use.)
TBA relevance: The TBA is not using the copied materials for
non-profit purposes as the TBA is a commercial, service providing business. The TBA is using the copied materials in
their exact form in the majority of cases, but especially in the case of copied
photos and individual Mudi data (such as name, color, sex, date of birth,
parents, littermates, etc.), which would be useless if transformed, which goes
against fair use rules. The photos and
data are duplicated for the same purpose they had wherever they were taken from,
and the purpose of these copied materials is the same in their former location,
as it is on the TBA.
2) The nature of the copyrighted work.
(This second factor looks at the nature of the underlying
work, whether it is more creative or more factual. Use of more creative or
imaginative underlying work is less likely to support fair use, while factual work is more likely to support fair
use. This factor also looks at the publication status of the copyrighted work,
if it is unpublished the use is less likely to be considered fair use.)
TBA relevance: The copyrighted photos and data in both online
Mudi databases are meant to be factual (although there can be serious fact
affecting errors in both databases), however, the majority of the data and
photos were first published on the MAB website, as well as a significant
portion of the TBA data came from a private database share that was not
authorized to be made public, therefore the use of the data/photos by TBA on
their identical purpose public website is unlikely to be considered as fair
use.
3) The amount and substantiality of the
portion used in relation to the copyrighted work as a whole.
(This third factor takes into account the portion of the
copyrighted work that was used compared to the copyrighted work as a whole. When
the amount used is very small in comparison to the copyrighted work, this favors
fair use, however if the amount used is not insignificant, this will favor the
copyright owner. This factor also takes into consideration if the portion of
the material used was the ‘heart’ of the work, if the portion copied is deemed
to be a crucial part of the original material, it will likely go against fair
use consideration, even if the portion was very small.)
TBA relevance: The database deployed on the TBA website was
first privately made from data that was mainly copied from the MAB database. The
TBA Mudi database was launched with full public access in April 2023 with
approximately 7500 Mudis. It is likely
that 75% of the current TBA data came from the MAB (the TBA database launched
with approximately 7500 Mudis and now has 10,000 = 75%, however harvesting of data
from the MAB has not stopped, meaning more than 75% is possible). The essential individual Mudi data copied
over to the TBA (by the original private database builders based in the UK and
Northern Ireland) is the crucial element, or ‘heart’ of the MAB, and the
majority of the TBA data was harvested from the MAB, which makes it unlikely
that the copied data and photos would count as fair use.
4) The effect of the use upon the potential
market for or value of the copyrighted work.
(The fourth factor considers whether the copied material
may harm the current value, but also whether use may cause harm to potential
markets that could be exploited by the copyright owner if the use were to
become widespread. If the use harms the copyright owner’s current or potential
market, it will likely go against fair use. Along with the first factor, this
factor is one of the most important in the fair use analysis.)
TBA relevance: There is a consideration of harm to private
individuals, as well as harm to the MAB original online database. Creating a
duplicate version of the MAB online database by the TBA has created a serious conflict
between users, supporters and information flow.
The MAB is free of charge to all users and always has been, while the
TBA basic database use is free, there are also fee based upgrades, which mostly
make the site easier to use (which is not vital), but the paid service upgrade automatically
notifies owners when someone has entered data to the records of Mudis they own
or have bred, which is vitally important to be informed of (the TBA allows
anyone to make any data entry to any Mudi in the database, whereas the MAB only
allows owners and breeders to enter data to their own Mudis). As there is now a
second online database option, based on the data and photos harvested from the
first (MAB), the opportunity for the original MAB database to change to a paid
service is unlikely to be successful, which poses a serious threat to its
future existence and ability to upgrade services offered.
An immediate and greater harm via factor four is to individual
photo and data owners, but especially to photo owners. If the TBA is allowed to take and use any
photo from any location they want without permission, this will limit photo
owners from using their photos for their own projects and purposes, some of
which may provide monetary benefit if the owner had sole access to them, rather
than the fully public access of the TBA.
For example, if someone makes custom pedigrees using photos they have personally
taken with their own camera or asked permission to use for this purpose, if the
needed photos for the project are already taken to the TBA without permission
or royalty fee, then the ability for that individual to use them for financial
gain is lessened or lost. Also, the TBA is using photos and data of others for
their own financial gain, without their permission, which goes against existing
copyright law, rather than at least paying the photo owners a royalty fee for
their use.
The principles of fair use apply equally to every type of
publication, whether it is a printed educational document, or a website. There
are no concrete rules for determining how these four factors will be applied in
a dispute, as every copyright infringement case is unique and must be decided on
its own circumstances. While one factor or another of the four may carry more weight
in a fair use determination, all four factors must still be considered, and one
factor alone cannot determine whether the use qualifies for permission exclusion. However, the first and fourth factors are often
the most influential in decision making, as well as the answers to the following
key questions:
1) Did the unlicensed/unauthorized use “transform” the
copyrighted material by using it for a different purpose than that of the
original, rather than just repeating the work for the same intent and value as
the original?
2) Was the material taken appropriate in kind and amount,
considering the nature of the copyrighted work and of the use?
If the answers to both questions is ‘yes’, a court is more likely to agree with fair use of the disputed material. If we ask these questions with regard to the TBA website use of unauthorized materials, both questions are answered with ‘no’, as explained in the 4 factors above.
Square Pegs in Round Loopholes
There is one more copyright ‘no permission needed’ loophole,
which the people that upload and enter the copied materials to the TBA claim gives
them the authority to use any copied materials without permission, this is the “educational
purpose” use exclusion.
The burden of proof for the “educational purpose” use exclusion
is the responsibility of the user of the copied materials to demonstrate that the
website/publication they place copied materials to is exclusively educational
and does not profit from usage of copied materials. It is also important to
know that the use of “educational purpose” is far more limited than most people
that claim this excuse, think it is.
Also, as most people don’t know about the rules of this loophole, they
will not question it further when they are told by the material copiers they
have the ‘right’ to use your stuff. Some
people copying materials for use on a site, confuse and mislead owners of photos,
and other materials, with this loophole so that they can continue to use others’
copied materials to ‘beef up’ a site, they could not provide information for by
themselves. I have personally experienced this deceiving attitude when I asked
to have photos that belonged to me taken off the TBA database, they don’t
apologize and take them off without question as they should. Instead, they argue with you claiming “they
have the right to use them under the fair use for educational purposes”
exclusion. It is only after demanding
they remove my photos several times during the request, that they keep them off
the website. Allowing deliberate disrespect for the rights of others, as well
as allowing data entry users to use a false claim of rights exclusion, is not
how a reputable business operates.
Because the TBA is a ‘for profit business’ that accepts payment
through ‘service upgrades’ and three sponsorship levels, and their stated purpose
of business is as a “service provider”, more specifically: “TBA provides its
users with a platform for the recall of information about available animal
breeds”. These fee collecting options
and their stated purpose being other than educational, automatically excludes the
TBA website from the “educational purposes” loophole, as it is not a purely educational
website, and they also generate taxable revenue. However, I think it’s still important
to cover all the “fair use” for “educational purposes” rules, as the TBA does
not qualify under those exclusions either.
What Is “Educational Use”
The educational fair use guidelines apply to materials used
in educational institutions and for educational purposes. Educational institutions
include elementary and high schools, colleges, and universities.
Libraries, museums, hospitals, and other nonprofit
institutions also are considered educational institutions under most
educational fair use guidelines, when they engage in non-profit instruction,
research, or scholarly activities for educational purposes.
What are “Educational purposes”
- Non-commercial instruction or curriculum-based teaching by
educators to students at nonprofit educational institutions
- Planned non-commercial study, or investigation, directed
towards contribution to a field of knowledge
- Presentation of research results at non-commercial peer
conferences, workshops, or seminars
- School projects, scholarly studies and scholastic research
are also likely to be included
The TBA does not qualify under “educational use” or “educational
purposes” copyright exclusions as the website and business is not an
educational institution or other non-profit institution, that engages in
non-profit activities for educational purposes – TBA is a profit based service
provider business. This means the TBA
and its data contributors have no right to place your photos, documents or data,
by claiming this exclusion, to their website without your written permission. You are well within your rights to demand
they take your materials off their website.
Other Options to Take Back Control of Your Copyrighted Materials
If a website refuses to take down your copyrighted material,
you can send them a DMCA take down order.
Another option is to contact Google and report the copyright
infringement through their portal. They
will remove the website from their search engines if they find your materials
were subject to copyright infringement.
You can also confront copyright violators through social
media. You can make a post about the copyright infringement on your social media
accounts, with a tag to their accounts to make sure they see it.
Instructions for taking these steps listed above and others,
are provided in the References and Links section at the end of this article.
And in case you were wondering, you do not have to officially
register any of your photos, documents or other owned materials with any
official registry to claim copyright infringement thanks to WIPO and the Berne
Convention.
Fair Use for All
Accountability is an important part of fair use. The TBA supports anonymity of its data entry participants
by letting anyone make their own anonymous ID’s which are devoid of any identifying
information which is then credited to the data they enter. This makes any information entered to this
database extremely unreliable, as any of these empty ID people can enter data
to any dog they want, mislead those that request their materials be removed,
and no one will be able to question them personally as they are unknown
entities – how is this allowable on a public website that requires trustworthiness
to be of any value? It’s no wonder so
many breeders and owners do not want their Mudis listed on the TBA site, and
the TBA continues to do this without permission.
No one should tolerate or support a profit seeking business that
provides a platform which allows duplication of others work and materials, for its
monetary gain and operates in direct infringement of many laws. The TBA platform serves the same purpose and
nature as the long-ago existing MAB website, the TBA is just repackaging the
data and photos obtained from that website for their own profit, copyright law
clearly states this is against fair use of copyrighted materials: “where the
amount used is not insignificant, this factor will favor the copyright owner.
This factor also considers the qualitative amount of the copyrighted work used.
If the portion used was the “heart” of the work, this factor will likely weigh
against a finding of fair use even if that portion was otherwise a very small
amount.” This is exactly what has
occurred by the creation of the Mudi database on TBA specifically (this may not
apply to other breeds and their data on the TBA).
Anyone that enters copied data, photos or other materials,
without express written permission from the owner of said materials to the TBA
database, is committing copyright infringement and TBA refuses to be held accountable
for what is entered: “The information available through the platform is
provided by the users. TBA merely plays a purely technical role as
disseminator/host, with no influence over the content delivered by users, and
neither monitors nor checks information for correctness. Each user is
responsible for the content he or she provides to the platform”. They openly claim no regard for correctness of
information on their publicly available platform, this is definitely not the standpoint
of an educator or historian, which should remove any lingering doubt you might
have that the purpose of the TBA is education or research.
Just because photos and other materials are placed to the internet,
or into a printed publication, does not mean they are free to use by anyone anywhere
for any purpose – they are not, according to copyright laws. It is of course not easy to stop copying for
private use, but the second you use what is not yours in a visible space, if
the owner comes to you and wants you to remove it or pay for its use, you must comply
or face possible legal action which may end in a fine or payment for the time the
material was in use.
Maybe you were not aware of these laws, or the disposition
of the TBA, or maybe you were. Either
way, you now have a choice to make: will you continue to infringe copyright laws
for this business which clearly cares nothing about you or the Mudi breed, or
the accuracy of the information it provides, or will you do the right thing that
acknowledges true fair use for all? Your
choice will be a reflection of your morals and ethics, and there are a lot more
people with open eyes now that will see the path you choose.
References and Links
Mudi Adatbazis: https://mudiadatbazis.hu/
Irigy Hónaljmirigy: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irigy_H%C3%B3naljmirigy
TBA fee schedule: https://mudi.breedarchive.com/auth_user/overview
TBA company filing in Austria as an official business and
the purpose of said business: https://breedarchive.com/home/legalnotice
TBA Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/profile/100064360825074/search/?q=Mudi
Copyright explained: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copyright
https://support.google.com/legal/answer/3463239?hl=en
Copyright law in the EU: https://intellectual-property-helpdesk.ec.europa.eu/regional-helpdesks/european-ip-helpdesk/europe-frequently-asked-questions_en#Database_Protection_Domain_Protection
https://www.ipoi.gov.ie/en/commercialise-your-ip/tools-for-business/copyright-essentials.pdf
Copyright and Information Society Directive 2001: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copyright_and_Information_Society_Directive_2001#:~:text=The%20Copyright%20and%20Information%20Society,Europe%2C%20such%20as%20copyright%20exceptions.
Copyright outside of the USA: https://www.collegeart.org/standards-and-guidelines/intellectual-property/copyright-outside-us#:~:text=The%20United%20States%20Copyright%20Office,particular%20country%20and%20their%20enforcement.
Database copyrights: https://intellectual-property-helpdesk.ec.europa.eu/regional-helpdesks/european-ip-helpdesk/europe-frequently-asked-questions_en#Copyright
https://www.bitlaw.com/copyright/database.html
https://www.bitlaw.com/copyright/database.html#directive
EU data protection board: https://www.naih.hu/europai-adatvedelmi-testulet-edpb
Copyright length: https://www.copyright.gov/help/faq/faq-duration.html#:~:text=As%20a%20general%20rule%2C%20for,plus%20an%20additional%2070%20years.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_copyright_terms_of_countries
Orphaned works: https://web.law.duke.edu/cspd/orphanworks/
GDPR: https://gdpr.eu/what-is-gdpr/
CMSI: Code of best practices in fair use: https://cmsimpact.org/code/code-best-practices-fair-use-scholarly-research-communication/#:~:text=Fair%20use%20is%20the%20right,for%20the%20use%20in%20question.
Fair Use: https://www.copyright.gov/fair-use/
https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/17/107
Copyright Alliance: https://copyrightalliance.org/education/faqs/
https://copyrightalliance.org/faqs/what-is-fair-use/
US Copyright Office Circular 21 http://www.copyright.gov/circs/circ21.pdf
NatureTTL: https://www.naturettl.com/what-to-do-when-your-photos-are-stolen/
Berne Convention: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Berne_Convention
WIPO copyright treaty: https://www.wipo.int/about-wipo/en/
https://www.wipo.int/treaties/en/ip/wct/summary_wct.html
https://www.wipo.int/wipolex/en/text/124839
DMCA takedown notice: https://theartistsjd.com/dmca-takedown-notice/
https://www.copyright.gov/dmca/
Google reporting of copyright infringement for delisting: https://transparencyreport.google.com/copyright/overview?hl=en
https://support.google.com/legal/answer/3463239?hl=en
Website copyright infringement takedown: https://www.redpoints.com/blog/take-down-website-copyright-infringement/