Instagram said today that it has the
perpetual right to sell users’ photographs without payment or notification, a
dramatic policy shift that quickly sparked a public outcry.
The new intellectual property policy, which takes
effect on January 16, comes three months after Facebook completed its
acquisition of the popular photo-sharing site. Unless Instagram users delete
their accounts before the January deadline, they cannot opt out.
Under the new policy, Facebook claims the perpetual
right to license all public Instagram photos to companies or any other
organization, including for advertising purposes, which would effectively
transform the Web site into the world’s largest stock photo agency. One irked
Twitter user quipped that “Instagram is now the new iStockPhoto, except they
won’t have to pay you anything to use your images.”
“It’s asking people to agree to unspecified future
commercial use of their photos,” says Kurt Opsahl, a senior staff attorney at
the Electronic Frontier Foundation. “That makes it challenging for someone to
give informed consent to that deal.”
That means that a hotel in Hawaii, for instance,
could write a check to Facebook to license photos taken at its resort and use
them on its Web site, in TV ads, in glossy brochures, and so on — without
paying any money to the Instagram user who took the photo. The language would
include not only photos of picturesque sunsets on Waikiki, but also images of
young children frolicking on the beach, a result that parents might not expect,
and which could trigger state privacy laws.
Facebook did not respond to repeated queries from
CNET this afternoon. We’ll update the article if we receive a response.
Another policy pitfall: If Instagram users continue
to upload photos after January 16, 2013, and subsequently delete their account
after the deadline, they may have granted Facebook an irrevocable right to sell
those images in perpetuity. There’s no obvious language that says deleting an
account terminates Facebook’s rights, EFF’s Opsahl said.
Facebook’s new rights to sell Instagram users’
photos come from two additions to its terms of use policy. One section deletes
the current phrase “limited license” and, by inserting the words “transferable”
and “sub-licensable,” allows Facebook to license users’ photos to any other
organization.
A second section allows Facebook to charge money.
It says that “a business or other entity may pay us to display your… photos… in
connection with paid or sponsored content or promotions, without any
compensation to you.” That language does not exist in the current terms of use.
Google’s policy, by contrast, is far narrower and
does not permit the company to sell photographs uploaded through Picasa or
Google+. Its policy generally tracks the soon-to-be-replaced Instagram policy
by saying: “The rights you grant in this license are for the limited purpose of
operating, promoting, and improving our services.” Yahoo’s policies service for
Flickr are similar, saying the company can use the images “solely for the
purpose for which such content was submitted or made available.”
Reginald Braithwaite, an author and software
developer, posted a tongue-in-cheek “translation” of the new Instagram policy
today: “You are not our customers, you are the cattle we drive to market and
auction off to the highest bidder. Enjoy your feed and keep producing the
milk.”
One Instagram user dubbed the policy change
“Instagram’s suicide note.” The PopPhoto.com photography site summarized the
situation by saying: “The service itself is still a fun one, but that’s a lot
of red marks that have shown up over the past couple weeks. Many shooters —
even the casual ones — probably aren’t that excited to have a giant corporation
out there selling their photos without being paid or even notified about it.”
Another unusual addition to Instagram’s new policy
appears to immunize it from liability, such as class action lawsuits, if it
makes supposedly private photos public. The language stresses, twice in the
same paragraph, that “we will not be liable for any use or disclosure of
content” and “Instagram will not be liable for any use or disclosure of any
content you provide.”
Yet another addition says “you acknowledge that we
may not always identify paid services, sponsored content, or commercial
communications as such.” That appears to conflict with the Federal Trade
Commission’s guidelines that say advertisements should be listed as
advertisements.
Such sweeping intellectual property language has
been invoked before: In 1999, Yahoo claimed all rights to Geocities using
language strikingly similar to Facebook’s wording today, including the
“non-exclusive and fully sublicensable right” to do what it wanted with its
users’ text and photos. But in the face of widespread protest — and competitors
advertising that their own products were free from such Draconian terms — Yahoo
backed down about a week later.
It’s true, of course, that Facebook may not intend
to monetize the photos taken by Instagram users, and that lawyers often draft
overly broad language to permit future business opportunities that may never
arise. But on the other hand, there’s no obvious language that would prohibit
Facebook from taking those steps, and the company’s silence in the face of
questions today hasn’t helped.
EFF’s Opsahl says the new policy runs afoul of his
group’s voluntary best practices for social networks. He added: “Hopefully at
some point we’ll get greater clarity from Facebook and Instagram.”
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