dmr436 said:
There was a big stink here a while ago, made the local news, where Wally World refused to print somebody's wedding photos because they looked like professional shots.
One thing I do question (IANAL) is whatever empowers or binds Wally World to enforce this ... or qualifies them to judge. Many of the employees there <meow> are barely qualified to push the buttons on the Frontier, let alone judge the quality of the work.
That's the problem - there are no objective standards. But they've lost some lawsuits anyway, and they're doing this because it costs them more money not to.
You can blame Wally World if you like - and God knows I am not their cheering section.
But the blame in this case really belongs to the artists who have sued them and won, blaming them for not inspecting every photo they allow to be printed to make sure it does not infringe on any copyright.
Walmart policy is now - local managers have the right to refuse to print anything. They know it makes customers mad. They wish it didn't - they'd rather have happy customers spending lots of money. But the lawsuits hurt more.
Photographers and artists have the right to protect their work and make the profit from their own labor, right? And they want the government to enforce that.
So, when some doofus makes a bazillion copies of some famous photo or CD or DVD and blasts it out for a nickle each, the artists sue.
That's a good thing, right?
But the doofus in question hasn't got jack for money by the time he/she is caught. So the lawyers say let's go after everyone who enabled the doofus. That would be Walmart in some cases. So Walmart gets sued. The argument is that Walmart 'knew, or should have known' that their equipment was being used to violate the artists copyright. They argued, they lost, they paid. Artist happy now.
So which should they do? You tell me, I'm all ears.
Best Regards,
Bill Mattocks