back to article Megastar personalities are intellectual property in draft law

The Guernsey Intellectual Property Office (IPO) has opened a public consultation on draft laws that would for the first time anywhere in the world allow celebrities to register their personality rights as a form of intellectual property. A sports law expert said the chance for enhanced legal certainty over their image and …

COMMENTS

This topic is closed for new posts.
  1. John Lewis 4

    Personalities or Egos?

    Eh?

    1. LarsG

      AS MOST STARS HAVE NO.....

      personalities anyway outside of what is given to them in a film script, what would they actually register?

  2. b0llchit Silver badge
    Mushroom

    Black-bar picture release

    So, the next photo album of celebrity snapshots will be compiled with pictures that have placed a prominet black bar over each and every registered prick with a price-tag put on it.

    Intellectual Property: an oxymoron.

  3. Marck D Pearlstone
    Thumb Down

    Not a healthy move

    This legislation seriously jeopardises two ancient and venerated forms of entertainment - caricature and impressions. Such fictitious rights render many such forms of satire an infringement of those rights. Who loses? The consumers, as usual. Will we see Apple vs Samsung style patent wars over personalities who think they have rights to personality traits that we all knew "someone at school who always did that anyway". Pointless and damaging IMHO.

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      It specifically states that using the image for non-profit uses is OK...you just can't make money from it. So caricature and satire are fine, provided you don't do it professionally. Anyway, it's Guernsey - who the hell cares what they legislate (apart from people in Guernsey, of course)?

      1. John G Imrie

        It specifically states that using the image for non-profit uses is OK

        So that's Rory Bremmer out of a job then.

    2. Terry Cloth
      Paris Hilton

      Too late---it's already in force in California

      It's not Apple, but rather White vs. Samsung (http://law2.umkc.edu/faculty/projects/ftrials/communications/white.html [dissent]).

      For those of you not paying attention almost a decade ago, Samsung brought out a series of commercials showing the ``future'', including one of a robot in a blond wig and evening gown standing in front of a board full of letters.

      Vanna White sued for $1M, claiming Samsung had used her ``likeness'', protected under California law, and hypnotized enough 9th-Circuit judges to declare that she had been harmed under California law. She actually got ~$400k. The dissent referenced is well worth a read.

      I have a hard time sympathizing with the personalities wanting protection. Those famous enough to be covered by such a law already make more than enough for a living in which in which they feel no pain. Poor babies.

  4. NoneSuch Silver badge
    Happy

    Pee-Wee Herman

    Gary Glitter

    Simon Cowell

    Pauly Shore

    Rosanne Barr

    Robert Peston

    Mr and Mrs Beckham ... etc. etc. etc. ad nauseum.

    Delete their names from the Internet and the world will be a happy place indeed.

  5. Cynical Observer
    Go

    Television suddenly looks promising

    OI! You can't behave like a talentless twat! I have a prior claim on that and I'll sue you!

    That should cull a large part of the X-Pop-Strictly-Got-No-Talent-On-Ice brigade!

  6. g e

    Lunacy

    qwertyuiop

  7. Antony Riley
    Paris Hilton

    RIP Political Satire

    Paris Hilton icon, since it'd probably fall foul of this law, where it to ever come to pass.

    1. Sean Timarco Baggaley
      FAIL

      RTFA

      The law explicitly includes exemptions for satirical usage.

      1. Antony Riley

        You're right, it's still funny though.

        I could have called it just another example of lawyers making laws more complicated to ensure their future fruitful employment. Any attempt to simplify laws by making new ones (without repealing older, more complex legislature) is a joke. But that'd be boring, depressing and right.

  8. BristolBachelor Gold badge

    Only in Guernsey ?

    So if they pass this law in Guernsey, does it only apply in Guernsey? And if so, how much difference will it make when most of the newspapers and magazines that show the embarrasing photos of celebs are in UK, USA, etc.?

    On the other hand, if Guernsey can just have their own laws on IP that work across the planet, can SeaLand pass their own laws too and start dictating global terms?(they could certainly do with the income!)

    1. Antony Riley

      That'd require SeaLand to sign up to international IP treaties.

      International enforcement of IP is a horrible mess, made worse by the Internet. It's a horrible subject which could be argued at length.

    2. Andrew Norton

      would require sealand to first be a country.

      It is not.

  9. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Language abuse

    Do those people even know what the word "intellectual" means?

  10. M7S
    Joke

    Could I be sued by the writers of Fawlty Towers?

    As in conversation recently I've not mentioned the war?

    1. DavCrav

      It depends...

      on whether earlier you mentioned it once but you think you got away with it.

  11. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    How on earth...

    does this promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts?

  12. Irongut

    not detrimental

    So all the gossip mags will have to stop printing pictures of celebs? May as well stop printing entirely.

    In which case I support this law!

  13. ratfox
    Mushroom

    Kill it with fire

    H6242 — Kill all the lawyers.

  14. Dan Paul
    Joke

    Why just Celebrities?

    Each and every individual should be allowed to register their "Personality Rights".

    Especially those who were raised with "Too much Self Esteem".

    That way, everyone will have their god given chance to be self important.

    1. bep

      Not a joke really

      One law for all or none, I think that is how it is supposed to be.

      Harry Bloggs, bus driver, who 'allegedly' ran over a kitten yesterday, except it now turns out the kitten was already dead, actually it turns out it was a toy kitten and he didtn't actually run over it, but too late the tabloids and talk-back radio have already got hold of it. Old 'arry would probably want some access to a bit of this as well, but is he famous enough?

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Well, he would be after they printed the article,

        but not before. And since he now is, but is through an act of the papers, could the papers claim the celebrity rights and therefore own Old 'arry?

  15. davcefai
    Joke

    Paper Planes

    How does this affect the PARIS (retroactively) and LOHAN projects? Will the Reg have to ensure that LOHAN does not pass over Guernsey? I can imagine Guernsey scrambling fighter planes to intercept LOHAN :-)

  16. BoldMan

    But surely one of the prime qualifications to have your "personality" protected is to prove you have one in the first place... that ought to disqualify most celebs then... (after of course the first person who registers "money grabbing vacuous twat" as a personality)

  17. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Good idea

    The net effect will be to reduce the instances of reproduction of a celebrity's personality - I'm sure we'd all be happy with that.

  18. David Neil

    How would this have impacted...

    The counter claim by Victoria Beckham to the Patent Office over Peterborough United's attempt to trademark the term "Posh"?

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/football/teams/p/peterborough_united/2404115.stm

  19. Pascal Monett Silver badge

    So, basically

    Egotistical twats can now add another layer of varnish on their glistening turds in some totally unimportant piece of emerged landmass with laws that do not concern 99.9% of the world.

    That's really news that only a media whore could be interested in.

  20. 2cent

    Assumed privacy for sale

    If you in the news, no matter who you are, it is assumed that what ever is produced has a value directly correlating to news sources profits.

    Everyone should get a cut of the action.

    "Special people" should have to go to court for extenuating circumstances.

    One mans privacy is not another mans open door.

This topic is closed for new posts.