Animal-rights group settles in lawsuit around Monkey's selfie rights

Lawyers for an animal-rights group says it has settled a US lawsuit over who owns the copyright to selfie photographs snapped by a monkey in Indonesia.

A selfie taken by monkey Naruto, who picked up a photographer's camera.

A selfie taken by monkey Naruto, who picked up a photographer's camera. Source: Wikimedia

A US lawsuit over who owns the copyright to selfie photographs snapped by a monkey has been settled before a federal court could answer the novel legal question.

Under the deal, the photographer whose camera was used to take the photo agreed to donate 25 per cent of any future revenue to charities dedicated to protecting crested macaques, lawyers for an animal-rights group said on Monday.

They said they would seek to dismiss the case pending before the San Francisco-based 9th US Circuit Court of Appeals.
The People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals sued on behalf of the macaque monkey in 2015, seeking financial control of the photographs for the benefit of the monkey named Naruto.

Lawyers for the camera's owner, nature photographer David Slater, argued that his company, Wildlife Personalities Ltd., owns worldwide commercial rights to the photos, including a now-famous selfie of the monkey's toothy grin.

Slater argued that he engineered the photographs in 2011 by travelling to an Indonesian jungle, spending three days with a troupe of monkeys to gain their trust and deliberately making his camera accessible to the animals to take photographs.

A lower court ruled in the photographer's favour, saying that animals could not hold copyrights. The 9th Circuit was considering PETA's appeal.

The lawyers notified the appeals court on August 4 that they were nearing a settlement and asked the 9th Circuit not to rule.

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Published 12 September 2017 11:40am
Updated 12 September 2017 1:37pm
Source: AAP


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