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Why You Should Never Lose Your Digital Media

kkrista writes "What would you do if you found someone's digital media card from their camera in your taxi? One such individual has decided to provide the world with 227 days of entertainment. I Found Some Of Your Life will post a photo a day and accompanying fictional narrative for the next 227 days using the photos found on a digital media card left in a cab. Is it pure genius or pure evil? Who cares? Just be thankful they're not your photos."

15 of 671 comments (clear)

  1. RSS Feed by XaXXon · · Score: 4, Informative

    They have an RSS feed, so if you have your shiny new mozilla 1.0PR, then you can easily make it a live bookmark.

    Just click on the lightning bolt in the bottom left corner of the browser. It's really neat :)

    Sorry to all of those who have been using RSS feeds forever.. I just got hooked :)

  2. Pure Copyright Infringement by VidEdit · · Score: 3, Informative

    The idea of posting someone's photos, without permission and one at a time, is funny but wrong. It would be one thing if they just posted a few so the owner could know who had them and how to get them back, but that is not what is happening. Plus, the photos are automatically copyright by the person who took them. The blogger does not have permission or fair use rights to post all of the photos to the internet for their own amusement.

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  3. Re:Thank you sir, may I have another photo publish by llin · · Score: 5, Informative

    If you read this comment, you'll see that someone already found one of the people in the photo a while ago. The conclusion of the discussion at the time was that the participants should be allowed to 'discover for themselves.'

    Hopefully the meta-drama will half as fun as the blog so far :)

    (Yeah, it's pretty wrong. But hilarious.)

  4. The Victims by ravenspear · · Score: 5, Informative

    One of the comments posted on the blog identified this sorority as the source from another picture of one of the girls that was posted on their site.

  5. Re:Thank you sir, may I have another photo publish by tempest2i · · Score: 4, Informative

    Here you go people.

    First a picture from "I Found Some of Your Life"

    Dianne

    Now a picture from KappaDelta

    Lindsey

    That's basically the comment that got deleted.

    And those are the same person!

    --
    awake since 7, angry since I met you
  6. Re:Camera in the woods by Dun+Malg · · Score: 4, Informative
    Damn, those are some creepy photos.

    Where's the evidence that says it's a hoax?

    The photos that come after the one at the top of the tower where you see the creepy hunched over guy's reflection are clearly meant to appear as though they were taken as the photographer ran like hell. The fact that none of them are blurry shows that he stopped to take each of these "frantic" shots carefully enough for them to be in perfect focus with no motion blur. The sequence was too carefully crafted and tells a linear story too clearly to be unintentional. It's not even half as believeable as The Blair Witch Project, and that was pretty obviously fiction as well.

    --
    If a job's not worth doing, it's not worth doing right.
  7. Re:Actually it's purely illegal by torokun · · Score: 5, Informative

    (First, please note: I am not a lawyer, only a law student. Don't rely on this as legal advice!)

    That's not true. The finder has the basic common law title to the item as against all but the original owner. Title to property is relative. The finder has "worthier title" to the property than anyone but the original owner.

    Now everything I'm about to say is based on the presumption that this is "lost property" rather than "abandoned property"...

    This seems to be valid law in NY. See Hume v. Elder, 178 A.D. 652, 165 N.Y.S. 849 (2d Dep't 1917); Forman v. Rosetti, 38 Misc. 2d 317, 238 N.Y.S.2d 328 (City Civ. Ct. 1963); Garramone v. Simmons, 177 Misc. 330, 30 N.Y.S.2d 465 (Sup 1941)...

    But at the moment he finds it, he only has an expectation of that title in NY, and he has to wait for the statutory time period to elapse, and the owner not to claim the item, for title to vest. See Bisignano v. Harrison Central School Dist., 113 F. Supp. 2d 591, 147 Ed. Law Rep. 529 (S.D.N.Y. 2000).

    He gives it to the police, they keep it for a period, and when the owner doesn't claim it, and the time period expires, he can demand it back and his title vests.

    The periods are described in N.Y. Pers. Prop. Law 253(7), and are basically...

    * three months, if the property has a value of less than $ 100.00
    * six months, if the property has a value between $ 100.00 and $ 499.99
    * one year, if the property has a value between $ 500.00 and $ 4999.99
    * three years, if the property has a value of $ 5000.00 or more

    But there's more! This guy may be guilty of a misdemeanor:

    N.Y. Pers. Prop. Law 252(1) says he has to turn it in to the cops within 10 days. 252(3) says anyone convicted of noncompliance is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by up to a $100 fine or 6 months in jail or both.

    He also may be guilty of larceny:

    N.Y. Penal Law 155.05(2)(b) says this could be larceny if he doesn't take reasonable measures to return the property.

    Just goes to show, use your instincts about what's right, and you'll probably be much better off... ;)

  8. Re:Thank you sir, may I have another photo publish by digital+photo · · Score: 5, Informative

    Actually...

    Having government registration allows you to have a more solid footing.

    What is important in Copyright infringement cases is to prove intent. In this case, the poster KNEW the content was not their's to use and fully intended to post the content up.

    The poster also decided to create fake events around the pictures. This can lead to slander/libel cases if the posted content results in mental anguish, loss of job, or other personal losses.

    The quality of the pictures is not the point, the theft and misuse of the pictures is.

    It would be very funny if the pictures actually belonged to a law student. *grins*

  9. Re:If you think this is evil, by hai.uchida · · Score: 5, Informative

    You should'a warned us you're linking to a porn site.

    Regardless, it's not the same thing at all. An unprotected gallery on photobucket is much more fair game than stealing someone's memory card and platering it all over the web.

    --
    my password is private, but unchanged.
  10. Re:You could always DMCA the bastard. by mpmansell · · Score: 5, Informative

    Surely, even if a 'finders-keepers' rule applies, it doesn't cover the photos, which are covered by copyright. If this is not the case, then any photograph, radio signal, dvd, etc that you found in such a juristiction would ultimately end up in the PD.

    He might gain ownership of the storage device, but I doubt the content on it

  11. Re:Disappointed by oojah · · Score: 3, Informative

    > Its a memory card, its not like there is an
    > address and phone number on it

    Write your name address and phone number (or whatever details you want to include) on a piece of paper and take a picture of it on minimum resolution. Set to read only so you don't accidently delete it.

    Cheers,

    Roger

    --
    Do you have any better hostages?
  12. Re:What about model releases? by Zebbers · · Score: 4, Informative

    Jesus christ, model releases are for when you use images in the PROMOTION of a commercial product/service, etc. Please know of what you speak. There would be very little to no photographic art if you had to obtain a "release" from anyone and anything.

  13. Re:You could always DMCA the bastard. by SlamMan · · Score: 3, Informative

    IANAL, but my law classes say this is correct. You have copyright over everything you create, unless its covered by some else first (ie, if I happen to make the exact thing as you, even if I haven't seen yours, you own in)

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    Mod point free since 2001
  14. Re:Thank you sir, may I have another photo publish by SlamMan · · Score: 3, Informative

    Interesting. Your comments caused me to double check the logistics of how a copyright is actually enabled. Basically, you don't do anything. You need to register things with the government en order to sue for damages, but you can do that anytime up until the copyright expires (Life+70).

    Trademarks you have to continually enforce; copyrights you don't have to do a thing other than have created it. The © symbol is not necessary, its more of a reminder.
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    Comments by squigit, © 2004

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    Mod point free since 2001
  15. Site has been taken down by mattOzan · · Score: 3, Informative
    Monday, September 20, 2004
    Editor's Note

    Hi. No new posts until further notice.
    If you know things: ifsoyl at gmail.com.

    posted by jordan | 1:57 PM

    -+-+-+-

    Thanks for ruining it for everyone, Slashdot :)

    Actually, I figured with tidal wave of publicity a slashdotting gets you, plus the timbre of the legal-minded comments posted here, the site was doomed.