Digital Rights Management at Burning Man
One groovy San Francisco organization, the Electronic Frontier Foundation, upbraids another, Burning Man, over Burning Man's claims of property rights over images shot at their event (held on public land in Nevada's Black Rock Desert):
In a few weeks, tens of thousands of creative people will make their yearly pilgrimage to Nevada's Black Rock desert for Burning Man, an annual art event and temporary community celebrating radical self expression, self-reliance, creativity and freedom. Most have the entirely reasonable expectation that they will own and control what is likely the largest number of creative works generated on the Playa: the photos they take to document their creations and experiences.
That's because they haven't read the Burning Man Terms and Conditions.
Those Terms and Conditions include a remarkable bit of legal sleight-of-hand: as soon as "any third party displays or disseminates" your photos or videos in a manner that the Burning Man Organization (BMO) doesn't like, those photos or videos become the property of the BMO. This "we automatically own all your stuff" magic appears to be creative lawyering intended to allow the BMO to use the streamlined "notice and takedown" process enshrined in the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) to quickly remove photos from the Internet.
The BMO also limits your own rights to use your own photos and videos on any public websites, (1) obliging you to take down any photos to which BMO objects, for any reason; and (2) forbidding you from allowing anyone else to reuse your photos (i.e., no licensing your work no matter what is depicted, including Creative Commons licensing, and no option to donate your work to the public domain).
Moreover, the Burning Man Terms and Conditions also strip attendees of their trademark fair use rights. The ticket terms forbid any use of Burning Man trademarks on any website, which means that ticket-holders can't label their photos "Burning Man 2009" or even use the words "Burning Man" on their Facebook walls or Twitter updates…..
BMO's not the first to misuse the DMCA this way. Some doctors recently have begun to use the DMCA process to take down negative comments patients post about them to websites like RateMDs.com. How can they do this? Under the same theory BMO is using, each doctor demands that patients assign to the doctor copyright in anything the patient writes online about the doctor. It's bad enough that some companies routinely trot out contracts prohibiting you from criticizing them, but it's another thing altogether when they demand that you hand over your copyrights to any criticisms, so that they can use the DMCA to censor your own expression off the Internet.
I wrote a book about Burning Man, as well as a Feburary 2000 Reason magazine cover feature. I addressed the complicated intersections of liberated art and cold corporate commerce there in this July 2007 piece.
[Hat tip: Burncast.tv]
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Burning Man, an annual art event and temporary community celebrating radical self expression, self-reliance, creativity and freedom.
You left out "masturbatory self-congratulation and general narcissistic thumb-sucking."
Burning Man is a fascist organization.
Burning Man is a fascist organization.
I take it you thought about "Yo, f--k Buring Man", but decided you didn't want to risk the flame damage to your weiner?
It takes a really bad law to result in such silliness. And what would it take to embarrass BMO? I mean, think about it.
strike through16 years agoThey might have had at least part of a case if the property were private, but it isn't. They lease it from the state and/or the federal government. "Allowing" attendees to photograph and videotape the images--but with the caveat that they may be censored if BMO? doesn't approve of them--is a stretch. Good luck enforcing that, BMO.?
Burning Man is an institutionalized celebration of individuality. Obviously somebody needs to go back and check their premises.
bunch of sell outs.
I take it you thought about "Yo, f--k Buring Man", but decided you didn't want to risk the flame damage to your weiner?
Don't make assumptions about my motivations, fascist.
On the other, read your damn ticket. You don't like the terms, start your own community theater production of The Wicker Man in some other diseased patch of the godforsaken desert.
strike through16 years agoOn the other, read your damn ticket
Or engage in civil disobedience. Post your images and dare them to take action. So long as no one is perpetrating a fraud, they'll be fine.
I'm conflicted here. On the one hand, the contract says what it says, and if you don't like it, don't sign it.
On the other, the contract is stupid, overreaching, and likely unenforceable. So I'm sympathetic with anyone who tells Burning Man, Inc. to stuff it up their hemorrhoid-hole.
Goddamn dirty hippies.
I'd be fine with shitcanning ticket contracts and the "By opening this box to retrieve this statement, you have agreed to..." bullshit. All contracts should be as difficult as a mortgage contract. Cuts down shenanigans on both sides of the aisle.
This is what happens when you combine hippies with lawyers in a hyper-legalistic society.
Oddly, there has always been a fascistic undercurrent to the counter-culture - it's a short step from "everyone should live like me" to "everyone SHALL live like me."
Conservatives are equivalent to liberals in their willingness to use state coercion to acheive social goals. The slippery slope to fascism may be greased by the tendency of many on the left - including hippies - to view traditional social mores and standards they object to as equivalent to government impositions enforced with coercion. They get confused, and conclude that NON-TRADITIONAL mores and standards should therefore become the law of the land.
Yo, fuck copyright.
Brian,
Have you contacted BMO for a response?
strike through16 years agocreative lawyering intended to allow the BMO to use the streamlined "notice and takedown" process enshrined in the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) to quickly remove photos from the Internet
Like on YouTube, Brian? This "streamlined" process is time-consuming and cumbersome. YouTube to this day is crammed with crappy phone-video clips of truncated concert footage, all of which is a violation of the "terms and conditions" on their ticket stubs. There's no way BMO can enforce these terms in any meaningful way, rendering them impotent.
Articles like this make me think of Neslon Muntz.
Ha-ha
My in-house attorney (aka my wife) tells me that in general, the T&Cs on the back of tickets are basically unenforceable. The only real recourse the ticket holder has is to eject you from the event.
So wait until after Burning Man to post your pics and you're fine.
So wait until after Burning Man to post your pics and you're fine.
Or, make a big show of doing it at Burning Man, with the ensuing confrontation with the Burning Man Authoritays as Performance Art.
Celebrating freedom... yeah. I planned to do Burning Man in 2011 during a long road trip. I guess I can start on my 100' tall creative expression of the fine print.
Yeah, Doherty, we own your book now, too.
I think someone should ask the Burning Man tough political questions and post the results on YouTube. Get real close once the fire gets good and hot, right before the structure collapses.
Burning Man: run by hypocritical douches.
No surprise.
Or, make a big show of doing it at Burning Man, with the ensuing confrontation with the Burning Man Authoritays as Performance Art.
I like it. How's internet access on the playa?
"which means that ticket-holders can't label their photos "Burning Man 2009" or even use the words "Burning Man" on their Facebook walls or Twitter updates....."
I suppose you could use "Mann auf dem Feuer".
@Xeones
"Burning Man is a fascist organization"
"Don't make assumptions about my motivations, fascist."
That word you use, I don't think it means what you think it does. Seriously, if you don't get a joke, leave it alone. Not every comment that you don't understand is a personal attack. Johnny was only making a play on words. If one were to "fuck" a "burning man" one would "risk the flame damage" to ones "weiner". See, he's not talking about *YOU* and *YOUR* weiner, he's just using the pronoun "you" as a generalality. Now, not being a "fascist" myself, I'm not about to tell you what to do, but I do *suggest* that you would do well to chill the fuck out.
ok, so how have they actually used this provision?
Are they using it to stifle criticism? Or are they using it to take down embarrassing pics of people who didn't consent to be the subject of embarrassing pics on the interweb?
speaking of people who don't get jokes...
Or, make a big show of doing it at Burning Man, with the ensuing confrontation with the Burning Man Authoritays as Performance Art./i>
And stream the confrontation live.
I think Bubba has the right idea. I've been told this was added after some girls gone wild camera crews showed up one year.
Is there any other way to prevent people from commercializing the burn (by selling videos) or prevent people from publishing photos taken without permission?
Strike-thru:
I'm pretty sure that if a private party leases gov'mnt land it's de facto private land for the duration of the lease.
Burning Man was fun in the early nineties but has become just another commercial event. It went downhill when they banned the campfires and tiki torches. May as well go to Disneyland.