Digital copy of Photo with Captains?
#1
Posted 24 April 2012 - 07:40 PM
Is it possible to get that? CDs nowadays cost next to nothing :)
or we could bring our own memory sticks or blank discs....
#2
Posted 24 April 2012 - 07:44 PM
http://twitter.com/DavidBedwell
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#3
Posted 24 April 2012 - 07:56 PM
DavidB, on Apr 24 2012, 08:44 PM, said:
#4
Posted 24 April 2012 - 08:17 PM
Quagmire, on Apr 24 2012, 08:56 PM, said:
DavidB, on Apr 24 2012, 08:44 PM, said:
Thank you for your replies
#5
Posted 24 April 2012 - 08:32 PM
Quote
#6
Posted 24 April 2012 - 08:37 PM
Quagmire, on Apr 24 2012, 09:32 PM, said:
Quote
#7
Posted 24 April 2012 - 08:42 PM
Quagmire, on Apr 24 2012, 09:32 PM, said:
As someone who's done scanning for a living for the past 10 years - books, paintings, photos, artwork, I can actually say, to be honest no, if you were working from a perfect brand new photo the scanners themselves aren't that special. Larger and faster perhaps.
But a decent flatbed at max resolution can give you equally good results as a £3000 scanner. If you know how to use it.
But you can't recreate the resolution that the digital photo would contain.
Edited by TerraHawk, 24 April 2012 - 09:10 PM.
#8
Posted 24 April 2012 - 09:31 PM
Quagmire, on Apr 24 2012, 08:56 PM, said:
Quagmire, on Apr 24 2012, 08:56 PM, said:
Edited by TommyT, 24 April 2012 - 09:34 PM.
#9
Posted 24 April 2012 - 09:43 PM
TommyT, on Apr 24 2012, 10:31 PM, said:
Quagmire, on Apr 24 2012, 08:56 PM, said:
Quagmire, on Apr 24 2012, 08:56 PM, said:
I think you are correct that the purchase of anything like a photo, music, video etc doesn't give a transfer of copyright unless you buy the rights with the item. It's for your own personal use but you have no rights to do anything else with it and copyright remains with the original person, in this case the photographer.
That's my understanding but the whole thing about getting digital copies has been discussed in another thread and keeps cropping up before each event. It's not something SM have offered so far although I understand you can get such files from events in the US, so there must be a way of doing it that works for everyone.
Giles: "I used to be a highly respected Watcher, and now I'm a wounded dwarf with the mystical strength of a doily."
"If I'm stuck in a corner, I like my corner, it's the coolest corner I've ever been in" - Kerry King, Slayer
#10
Posted 25 April 2012 - 07:58 AM
Quagmire, on Apr 24 2012, 08:56 PM, said:
DavidB, on Apr 24 2012, 08:44 PM, said:
Most wanted guests:
Mr. T - Matt Smith - Ian McDiarmid - Ian Holm - Sean Bean - Peter Cullen - Frank Welker - David McCallum - Joanna Lumley - Christopher Lee - Ian McKellen - Jodelle Ferland(for a SIGNING event)
R.I.P Nicholas Courtney - The kindest man I ever had the pleasure to meet
#11
Posted 25 April 2012 - 09:51 AM
Quote
OK, this is getting complicated and I'm not sure if it cover digital or not but the assumtion would be yes unless explicately told (just safer that way too)
Under law, it is the photographer who will own copyright on any photos he/she has taken, with the following exceptions:
- If the photographer is an employee of the company the photos are taken for, or is an employee of a company instructed to take the photos, the photographer will be acting on behalf of his/her employer, and the company the photographer works for will own the copyright.
- If there is an agreement that assigns copyright to another party.
Copyright in a photograph lasts for 70 years from the end of the year in which the photographer dies. A consequence of this lengthy period of existence of the copyright is that many family photographs which have no market value, but significant emotional value, remain subject to copyright, even when the original photographer cannot be traced, has given up photography, or died (a problem known as copyright orphan). In the absence of a licence, it will be an infringement of copyright in the photographs to copy them. As such, scanning old family photographs to a digital file for personal use is prima facie an infringement of copyright.
Hope this helps.
#12
Posted 25 April 2012 - 10:33 AM
I do however understand and totally agree with the limitation of reproduction/use in commercial situations.
Obviously the world of photography has to catch up at some point but I doubt it will be in time for the con.
#13
Posted 25 April 2012 - 10:40 AM
The only reason I could see with SM not doing it so far is because of the sheer number of photo shoots that they do, if they got through thousands at one event, and everyone wanted digital copies sent out to them, yeah I could see it being a bit of a nightmare, but I really don't think the problem is anything to do with copyright
Most wanted guests:
Mr. T - Matt Smith - Ian McDiarmid - Ian Holm - Sean Bean - Peter Cullen - Frank Welker - David McCallum - Joanna Lumley - Christopher Lee - Ian McKellen - Jodelle Ferland(for a SIGNING event)
R.I.P Nicholas Courtney - The kindest man I ever had the pleasure to meet
#14
Posted 25 April 2012 - 10:44 AM
Lukara, on Apr 25 2012, 11:33 AM, said:
I do however understand and totally agree with the limitation of reproduction/use in commercial situations.
Obviously the world of photography has to catch up at some point but I doubt it will be in time for the con.
I'm sure you can go ahead and get it blown up and nobody would say anything. As for the blowing up bit - when I got a piece of a photo blown up, It was not done on a scanner. The photo shop had an enlarging kit which was basically taking another photo of a part of the original photo (i had lost the negative). Much better results than getting a scan. It was a few years ago now though. And if you are able to get a digital copy (which I would like also), try and get the RAW format and not just the JPG as it holds all the other information you need manipulate the photo without loosing the quality if you just manipulated the jpg
Edited by Quagmire, 25 April 2012 - 10:45 AM.
#15
Posted 25 April 2012 - 03:34 PM
Quagmire, on Apr 25 2012, 10:51 AM, said:
Quote
OK, this is getting complicated and I'm not sure if it cover digital or not but the assumtion would be yes unless explicately told (just safer that way too)
Under law, it is the photographer who will own copyright on any photos he/she has taken, with the following exceptions:
- If the photographer is an employee of the company the photos are taken for, or is an employee of a company instructed to take the photos, the photographer will be acting on behalf of his/her employer, and the company the photographer works for will own the copyright.
- If there is an agreement that assigns copyright to another party.
Copyright in a photograph lasts for 70 years from the end of the year in which the photographer dies. A consequence of this lengthy period of existence of the copyright is that many family photographs which have no market value, but significant emotional value, remain subject to copyright, even when the original photographer cannot be traced, has given up photography, or died (a problem known as copyright orphan). In the absence of a licence, it will be an infringement of copyright in the photographs to copy them. As such, scanning old family photographs to a digital file for personal use is prima facie an infringement of copyright.
Hope this helps.
That is absurd. This is not original photography. He is PAID for this specific purpose. Copyright Act states that if a photo is commissioned for 'private or domestic' purposes, then the client will be the first owner of copyright. In this case the organizer owns it and not the photographer. I would request showmaster to just have a mechanism of transferring the digital photo. When I visited Merlin in Warwick Castle, we were given the option to opt for a digital copy for additional £10. They copied the photo to a USB rubber bracelet. It was only 256MB and £10 was too must for it but hey we wanted it and there was a way and we were happy to pay that amount for a full resolution digital copy. It doesn't take much time or effort and the organizers make more money out of it. In this digital age where we upload everything to Flickr and Facebook, this is a must! Gee! This is a Star Trek convention, we must boldly go where no one has gone before!
#16
Posted 25 April 2012 - 03:37 PM
anam, on Apr 25 2012, 04:34 PM, said:
http://twitter.com/DavidBedwell
Long signatures mean you're going to Hell.
#17
Posted 25 April 2012 - 03:47 PM
You cant tell whats on a USB from the outside, and in the photo there is no name or ID number. And there is no rigidly set order to the photos (as people could turn up late or miss it entirely) so how would they know which photos to group together onto each USB?
And even with doing it by looking at faces, that would take an eternity! Either you'd need hundreds of staff all with a laptop/computer to go through and match faces and put them together in folders/onto USBs or have the same system with with you going up and picking yourself out of hundreds of faces. Each version would take way too long and way too much staff and tech.
And it would be the same with them being mailed out after. You;d have to have people working on it for weeks after looking at a pic of you and then finding the ones that matched, putting them on a USB/email and then sending them off. And then you need staff at the event to take down people's pics and details so they can be sent off.
And hell, from a customer stand-point I'd much rather scan an image in at home for free (as 99% of people do) than pay £10 extra for practically the same thing (quality issues aside). Even if this was implimented, I'd never bother at that sort of price. For that price I'd rather it was framed for me than digital
Any sort of rights issues aside, although that is why SM dont do it, the logistical and staffing and monitary and time-consuming issues around the digital versions make it impossible, especially for an event of this size or of say the size of LFCC or MK.
The only event type I could sort of see it working at is one of ME's weekenders, where the average attendance is around 250 people. That is a much more managable number and could possibly be done after the event.
So yeah, as with every other time this has been brought up, the thread is sort of a moot point. It wont happen for a long time, if ever, and especially not at a huge event like STL.
CM:MK 2-18, LFCC '07-'12, CM:Midlands 1-3, CM:L 1-2, Hub 2-4, Glasgow '09, , Bad Wolf, EMS 1-2
Attending:
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#18
Posted 26 April 2012 - 08:54 AM
BeatrixKiddo88, on Apr 25 2012, 04:47 PM, said:
You cant tell whats on a USB from the outside, and in the photo there is no name or ID number. And there is no rigidly set order to the photos (as people could turn up late or miss it entirely) so how would they know which photos to group together onto each USB?
And even with doing it by looking at faces, that would take an eternity! Either you'd need hundreds of staff all with a laptop/computer to go through and match faces and put them together in folders/onto USBs or have the same system with with you going up and picking yourself out of hundreds of faces. Each version would take way too long and way too much staff and tech.
And it would be the same with them being mailed out after. You;d have to have people working on it for weeks after looking at a pic of you and then finding the ones that matched, putting them on a USB/email and then sending them off. And then you need staff at the event to take down people's pics and details so they can be sent off.
And hell, from a customer stand-point I'd much rather scan an image in at home for free (as 99% of people do) than pay £10 extra for practically the same thing (quality issues aside). Even if this was implimented, I'd never bother at that sort of price. For that price I'd rather it was framed for me than digital
Any sort of rights issues aside, although that is why SM dont do it, the logistical and staffing and monitary and time-consuming issues around the digital versions make it impossible, especially for an event of this size or of say the size of LFCC or MK.
The only event type I could sort of see it working at is one of ME's weekenders, where the average attendance is around 250 people. That is a much more managable number and could possibly be done after the event.
So yeah, as with every other time this has been brought up, the thread is sort of a moot point. It wont happen for a long time, if ever, and especially not at a huge event like STL.
They would not obviously have the USBs ready. It takes less time to copy a file to a USB drive then to show you a photo, put it in an envelop and pass it on to you. With your VQ ticket no they can just scan the barcode and click a single button to copy the right photo to the USB. It takes about 9 seconds for the whole process. Since not everyone would not be opting for it, I don't think it would put that much burden on resource. As I said, times have changed, digital print with high quality hold more value than a traditional print which can get lost, fade etc. I would not mind paying extra for a digital copy. Everyone has their choice :)
Actually I would not mind going online and download the digital photos later when the convention is finished just like how we buy tickets.
#19
Posted 26 April 2012 - 09:20 AM
Quote
And even if not everyone opted for it - with, say, 2 photo areas running across the 3 days of the event, at the usual 3-400 photos/hour rate the photgraphers get through, that is easily 12,000 photos or more. Even if only 20% of people want a digital copy on USB, that's ~2400 photos to be copied. And 9 seconds is a little optimistic, tbh. (Take photo ticket, sort out any payment, plug in USB, wait for computer to recognise USB, copy photo, eject and hand back USB... yeah that's probably at least 30 seconds there) 2400 photos to copy at 30 seconds each = an extra 20 hours of work to be done across the event.
The issue that has been raised before with having the photos online to request is that of making sure no one tries to buy a photo of someone else. This comes into play especially when there are children involved.
Edited by etmuse, 26 April 2012 - 09:22 AM.
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#20
Posted 26 April 2012 - 09:46 AM
There are numerous ways to do it, Disney have a great system. You register a card to yourself and then whenever you have a picture taken, throughout the whole day, the photographer simply scans the card (takes seconds) and then at the end of the day you can go check all your prints. Have them put on a USB stick etc.
I'd prefer to just have the digital version then a print! My photos go on my PC/Facebook/iPad. I have maybe 1 or 2 in actual print, all my old photos have been scanned into my PC, sorted in Picasa and the originals destroyed.
A low-tech solution might be better than a whole system, though it seems odd such a big company wouldn't have one. The photos are transferred to a PC somewhere. Simply write the name of the file (or create a new code) on the back of the photo, when I pick my photo up, I give someone my e-mail address. They have the photo number and my e-mail address, they can send them out within a few days of the event.
Or as someone else said, I say, this is my print, can I have the digital version for a fiver extra please. They transfer it to a 256mb drive, should take about 30 seconds and they get paid for the additional service. Everyone's a winner!
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