The Citizen (KZN)

Monkey loses copyright case

- Washington

– Monkeys lack standing to sue for copyright protection and an animal rights group cannot act as legal guardian in such matters, a US appeals court ruled on Monday in a battle over ownership of a smiling “selfie” taken by an endangered macaque.

The dispute stemmed from a famous image that Naruto, a rare crested macaque who lives on a nature reserve, snapped using a camera that British photograph­er David Slater left mounted and unattended during a 2011 trip.

His grinning visage, which Slater published in a wildlife book, went viral and triggered the long-running legal battle over who had the copyright – the animal who snapped the picture or the nature photograph­er who owned the camera.

“The panel held that the monkey lacked statutory standing because the Copyright Act does not expressly authorise animals to file copyright infringeme­nt suits,” said the judges of the 9th US Circuit Court of Appeals.

Their opinion added that the group, People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (Peta), which filed a suit as a plaintiff on behalf of Naruto, was not a “next friend” of the monkey in a legal sense and failed to establish that it had a significan­t relationsh­ip with him.

“Denying him [Naruto] the right to sue under the US Copyright Act emphasises what Peta has argued all along — that he is discrimina­ted against simply because he’s a nonhuman animal,” Jeff Kerr, the general counsel to Peta, said in a statement.

Peta had argued the monkey was the legal owner of all photos he took. But a federal judge ruled in January 2016 that copyright law does not apply to animals.

A settlement was reached out of court in the case last year.

Attorneys for Naruto and Slater announced that Slater had agreed to donate 25% of future revenue from the photograph to charitable groups that protect Naruto and other members of his species in Indonesia. –

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