Time.com
Dear TimeWarner-AOL : Bite me.
This is what I got late last night :
From: margaret_langston@timeinc.com
Date: 28 February 2007 06:57:58 PM EST
To: Liza Sabater ...Subject: Re: DMCA Copyright Notice
Dear Website Proprietor:
I am an attorney for Time Inc., the corporate publisher of People Magazine. This will put you on notice that Time Inc. has concluded an agreement with a photo agency for exclusive rights to publish photographs of Patrick Dempsey and his family (including his newborn twins) in People Magazine and on People.com. These are the only photographs of Mr. Dempsey and his twins now in existence.In the past your website has posted photographs which have been licensed exclusively to Time Inc. for publication in People Magazine and on People.com, in violation of Time Inc.’s exclusive rights.
This letter is an official notification under the provisions of Section 512(c) of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act that the posting of any photographs of Patrick Dempsey and/or any other members of his family with his newborn twins, would infringe Time Inc.’s rights in North America, Australia and New Zealand.I have a good faith belief that use of such photographs in the manner set forth herein would not be authorized by of Time Inc., its licensing representatives, or the law. The information provided herein is accurate to the best of my knowledge. I hereby swear under penalty of perjury that I am authorized to act on behalf of Time Inc. for matters pertaining to notification of infringement of its exclusive rights in its copyrighted material.
Very truly yours
Nicholas J. Jollymore
Deputy General Counsel
Time Inc.
nicholas_jollymore@timeinc.com
Here is my response:
Chilling Effects | Copyright | Digital Creativity | Fair Use | first amendment | Law | ChillingEffects.org | Electronic Frontier Foundation | People Magazine | Time.com | TimeWarner-AOL
Time Magazine unknowingly reveals the Feminist Bloggers Network in one photograph

I couldn't resist writing that title because there is so much left unsaid of the power of social networks.
So Lindsay proudly posted that image, celebrating her sell to Time.com --a photograph they found of Amanda via Flickr. Flickr, by the way, has become a social networking site disguised as photo storage company.
Anyhow, she took that photograph of Amanda while she and I and a whole gaggle of political and entertainment bloggers were in Amsterdam. We were part of the Bloggers in Amsterdam group, paid by Holland.com and sponsored by BlogAds.
Many women in the Feminist Bloggers Network know each other now for more than a couple of years. Women tend to operate social networks and powerlines a bit differently than men, and so our presence in mainstream media has not been as forceful as the handful of male-run blogs the mainstream journos tend to call "The Blogs".
Well, we not be as prominent in the public eye as some of us would like to be, but make no mistake --we're everywhere.
Want proof? MAJeff, the last quote in that Time.com article happens to be a FBN member who's been on a blogging (but not commenting) sabbatical; and used to be a key player in our blog.
Just saying.
Check out my photo of Amanda and me in Amsterdam after the jump ...
Citizen Journalism | Gossip | Humor | Mainstream Media | Photography | Social networks | Amanda Marcotte | BlogAds | Bloggers in Amsterdam | Lindsay Beyerstein | Liza Sabater | Time.com






















