9th Circuit Court Elevates Celebrity Privacy Rights Over Video Game Portrayals
The EFF posted a biting response to yesterday's Ninth Circuit ruling that heavily weights celebrities' right to privacy, and construes that right very broadly. From the EFF summary of the case: "The plaintiff, Sam Keller, brought the case to challenge Electronic Art (EA)'s use of his likeness in its videogame NCAA Football. This game includes realistic digital avatars of thousands of college players. The game never used Keller’s name, but it included an avatar with his jersey number, basic biographical information, and statistics. Keller sued EA claiming that the game infringed his right of publicity — an offshoot of privacy law that gives a person the right to limit the public use of her name, likeness and/or identity for commercial purposes. ... Two judges on the panel found that EA’s depiction of Keller was not transformative. They reasoned that the 'use does not qualify for First Amendment protection as a matter of law because it literally recreates Keller in the very setting in which he has achieved renown.'"
The piece later notes that this reasoning "could impact an extraordinary range of protected speech."
I like to support the EFF, but I'm firmly in the camp of the athlete in this. Basically, collegiate athletes are unpaid, and the schools make tons of money off of their celebrity status. Then, EA swoops in and makes a contract with the private governing organization (NCAA) and gets to make even more money off of it. It's a guaranteed revenue stream as each year they release a new title with simply updated bitmaps and adjustments to values in the stats database. The NCAA gets a big fat chunk of profit (which they don't distribute). The schools also get big fat chunks of the profit (for using the school's trademarked logos and identities) but we somehow pretend that the athletes are amateurs and shouldn't be compensated beyond their education (which is little more than a rubber-stamped diploma).
I think it's atrocious, and I'm hoping this lawsuit shakes up the system substantially. The NCAA are the ones most at risk here in the fallout. EA won't be hit nearly as hard since this isn't their only major franchise, and the schools will still be able to license they way they always have.
Disclaimer - I'm a fan of collegiate football.
I'm out of my mind right now, but feel free to leave a message.....
How is it "bribing" a player to give them money so in return you have their permission to use their likeness?
That depends on whether accepting such a "bribe" would cost a student athlete his amateur status and thus his eligibility.
the whole "can't copyright essential game elements, only expressive artwork" deal
Tell that to Xio Software, who got successfully sued by The Tetris Company for making a block-stacking game that uses pieces made of four square blocks.