元のファイル (2,995 × 3,838 ピクセル、ファイルサイズ: 2メガバイト、MIME タイプ: image/jpeg)
This appears to be an AI-modified version of File:Che Guevara - Guerrillero Heroico by Alberto Korda - Original.jpg
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このファイルは、File:Che Guevara - Guerrillero Heroico by Alberto Korda.jpgによって代替されています。このファイルの代わりに、他のファイルを使うことをお薦めします。代替されたファイルの削除には合意が必要なことに注意してください。 解説CheHigh.jpgEnglish: Popularized cropped version of Guerrillero Heroico - Che Guevara
概要
日付Photo taken on 1960年3月5日; published within Cuba in 1961, internationally in 1967.
原典Museo Che Guevara, Havana Cuba
作者Alberto Korda
許可
(ファイルの再利用)
This file is in the public domain. The photo was used for the first time internationally in 1967. It is in the public domain by Decree Law no. 156, September 28, 1994, to amend part of Law no. 14 December 28, 1977, Copyright Act (Article 47) which states that the pictures fall into the public domain Worldwide, 25 years after its first use.
Cuba did not sign the ⇒Berne Convention until 1997, and this photo was taken and publicized 30 years before that and thus is in the public domain.
This includes being in the Public Domain in the United States - Since the image was first published in Cuba without compliance of US copyright formalities and used in Cuba before February 20, 1972.
Of importance yes it is true that Alberto Korda sued that vodka maker Smirnoff based on his "moral rights" (under the belief that Che Guevara wouldn't support alcohol) that are independent of copyright status, while also attempting to obtain copyright ownership of the photograph. Although "moral rights" are not recognized in the U.S. - they are recognized through most of the World and part of international copyright law. Moral rights are included in Berne Convention, so if the photographer is still alive, he still can sue, even if the picture is public domain. However, the moral rights are not transferable, and when Korda died 2001, no one can control the use of the picture anymore under that premise. As to his desire to show he was the rightful owner of the Copyright for the image, that was never decided upon in court as the Case of (Korda v. Lintas & Rex) was settled "sensibly and amicably" out of court.
As Ariana Hernandez-Reguant contends in (Copyrighting Che: Art and Authorship under Cuban Late Socialism Public Culture 2004 v. 16 pp. 1-30.) ~ "There was never any official ruling on whether the depiction constituted a violation of copyright." (pg 4). The author goes on to state that: ~ "Korda took the picture while working for a state-run newspaper, his actual property rights would be questionable under both Cuban and international law." (pg 4)
Of note as well before the photographer of the photo died, in reference to the image becoming a ubiquitous worldwide symbol, he also stated “As a supporter of the ideals for which Che Guevara died, I am not averse to its reproduction by those who wish to propagate his memory” ? Korda ⇒[1]
Moreover, Wikipedia allows for the use of "Images with iconic status or historical importance: As subjects of commentary" as fair-use. (Wikipedia:Non-free content). This image meets that criteria based on the fact that the Maryland Institute College of Art proclaimed this picture "the most famous photograph in the world and a symbol of the 20th century." ⇒[2] while The V&A Museum declared it "the most reproduced image in the history of photography." ⇒[3] (Note that so long as it is argued that this photograph is in the public domain, this fair-use argument is not relevant to determining its status as such. Neither can the fair-use argument support the decision to host this photograph on Wikimedia Commons, which accepts only freely licensed media.)
ADDENDUM OF SUPPORTING EVIDENCE:
All quotations come verbatim from ~ A Copyright Revolution: Protecting the Famous Photograph of Che Guevara, by Sarah Levy, 13 Law and Business Review of the Americas, Am. 687. Summer of 2007.