The “Monkey Selfie” Case: Can Non-Humans Hold Copyrights? - a podcast by Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society at Harvard University

from 2018-02-05T16:30:11

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After a photographer left his camera equipment out for a group of wild macaques to explore, the monkeys took a series of photos, including selfies. Once the photos were posted publicly, legal disputes arose around who should own the copyrights — the human photographer who engineered the situation, or the macaques who snapped the photos. This unique case raises the increasingly pertinent question as to whether non-humans — whether they be monkeys or artificial intelligence machines — can claim copyrights to their creations.

Jon Lovvorn, Lecturer on Law and the Policy Director of Harvard Law School's Animal Law&Policy Program, hosts a discussion panel featuring Jeff Kerr, the General Counsel of PETA, which sued on behalf of the monkey, and experts on copyright, cyber law, and intermediary liability issues, as well as Tiffany C. Li of Yale Law School’s Information Society Project, and Christopher T. Bavitz and Kendra Albert of Harvard Law School’s Cyberlaw Clinic.

More info on this event here:https://cyber.harvard.edu/events/2018/luncheon/01/monkeyselfie

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