Hello again Siegfried!
It was so long since I heard from you I was afraid I had missed one of your emails. I am glad that this was not the case and that we can continue working towards a satisfactory conclusion of this.
In the email I sent you on 2009-05-01 I specifically asked you to show me any kind of legal document, such as a paragraph or legal precedent, that corroborated your argument that The Smiling Atom artwork is not a parody. I have read your latest email very carefully and I note that you have not included any such reference.
So must ask you again: what is your legal argument that The Smiling Atom artwork is not a parody?
Unless you can show any kind of legal weight behind your argument, I stand by my claim that The Smiling Atom artwork is a parody and as such considered an independent work according to Swedish copyright and with that I am entitled to use the work however I see fit. The restriction I have placed on the artwork in the form of an Creative Commons 3.0 BY-NC-SA did not need to be there and is a courtesy. Assuming The Smiling Atom is an independent work, I can use it freely. As you are surely aware, parodies all over the world millions in profit. I elected not to make any profit at all, and I’m not letting anyone else do it either, because I felt that would be a bit too much, even if I was entitled to do it. I am not even trying to cover my cost for the web hotel, the domain registration or the purchase of the fonts needed to created the artwork. And as previously mentioned I’m also linking to WISE and OOA from the download pages. As such I have already extended you a courtesy that goes well beyond what I’m obliged to do.
In this latest email you argue that because I use the artwork to “campaign” this would make the Smiling Atom artwork something other than a parody. I find this argument to be contradictory because “campaigning”, that is to voice and spread a message critical of that of the original, together with the imitation is what makes a parody just that. Voicing a message and trying to gain sympathy for your standpoint by opposing someone else’s standpoint is the exact reason why parodies are exempt from copyright since Freedom of Expression/Freedom of Speech when criticizing or opposing a message is considered more important than your rights as copyright owners to not have your work imitated. So if you are claiming that I am “campaigning”, and that there is strong likeness to the Smiling Sun artwork, you are in effect saying I’m using the Smiling Atom artwork in such a way that it fulfills the criteria of being a parody.
In short you are trying to claim that The Smiling Atom artwork is illegal for the very reasons that make it legal.
Also in this latest email, you are arguing that because I have not explicitly stated that The Smiling Atom artwork is a parody, it would not be that. I find that argument to be invalid on account of the fact that I have never seen a parody, anywhere in the world, with the words “This is a parody” or any other statement to that effect attached to it. Being 35 years old I would like to argue that I have seen enough works of parody to conclude that explicitly tagging them as parodies is not a common or even occasional practice. I have never seen it at all. Have you ever seen something like that? Hence a work does not explicitly have to state that it is a parody to constitute such. An implicit implication is more than enough.
You are trying to argue that the implicit statement of the intention of parody is too weak, even going as far as arguing that “[there] is no where even the slightest hint” that The Smiling Atom artwork is a work of parody. I find that argument to be invalid as well because that would strike down your main claim that The Smiling Atom artwork is an infringement in the first place. If people would not recognize The Smiling Atom artwork as a imitation, that would be because it would be too dissimilar to the original, but you are claiming the exact opposite to support your claim of infringement. Second, a great majority of the people I showed The Smiling Atom artwork to before publishing it reacted in exactly the manner you would expect from someone understanding it is a parody, that is to say with amusement and recognition. Not all agreed with the message but they most certainly recognized the intent of parody. And lastly I am, as I pointed out in my first email to you on 2009-04-30, linking to The Smiling Sun and WISE websites.
All in all, I find that the implicit statement that The Smiling Atom artwork is a parody is clear enough to not be misunderstood.
You also make the claim that in order to constitute a parody the work would have to be used “on a certain occasion”. I am not entirely sure what you mean by that, but assuming you mean that the work could only be used once or during a limited time, I cannot take that argument seriously either because that would mean every work of parody, like for instance movies such as “Hot Shots” would be copyright infringements if published beyond their initial screenings. Clearly this is not the case since I have the aforementioned movie as a legally purchased DVD on my living room bookshelf without Paramount Pictures or Warner Brothers trying to sue 20th Century Fox for copyright infringement of the movies “Top Gun” and “Superman” respectively.
As always Siegfried I am very willing to listen to legal arguments such as legislation and precedents. If you would show me any such document or documents that support your claim, I am more than willing to remove the artwork if you by these documents can show legal weight behind your arguments.
But so far you have not done that. You have referenced Swedish and European copyright legislation, which I recognize, but I have responded that The Smiling Atom artwork is exempt on account of being a parody and I have referenced legal documents stating that is the case. I have not seen you show me any kind of legal document that contradicts my claim of parody exemption. Do that, and I shall honor your claim, but will not honor it before I am shown you have legal weight behind your arguments.
For now, I am still rejecting your claim that The Smiling Atom artwork constitutes an illegal copyright infringement.
As such I will not remove The Smiling Atom artwork from the website.
I will also not go after other users of The Smiling Atom artwork, because even if it would constitute an illegal infringement of copyright, which I am claiming it isn’t, it is not my responsibility to ask them to take it down as people are personally responsible for their own actions. It would be up to you to contact them and ask them to take down The Smiling Atom artwork, referencing their respective countries’ legislation in order to put any weight behind your request.
As far as my postal address goes, I’m not in the habit of casually giving it out to email addresses I do not know for sure who is behind. If you need my address, you can find it by [instructions edited out].
with the best of regards
/Michael Karnerfors
P.S: Regarding the links you said in your last letter were not working. I have since checked them with a number of different browsers and found that they are working.
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Michael i Hallå P3
Published by nils.rudqvist on February 6, 2009Idag kunde de nyfikna lyssna till ett program som heter Hallå P3 i just P3. Där kunde lyssnare ringa in och debattera och argumentera för eller emot kärnkraftens varande.
I programmets slutskede fick NPYP’s Michael Karnerfors säga vad han tyckte om folkomröstningen 1980, vad som hände vid TMI 1979 med mera. Programledaren var inte helt insatt i debatten vilket var lite tråkigt. Kul var det dock att Michael mer eller mindre fick det sista ordet i programmet. Tidigare kunde man höra personer från till exempel Grön Ungdom och allmänheten i övrigt uttala sig om kärnkraften.
Programmet går att lyssna på i efterhand om man klickar sig in på programmets hemsida och klickar på “lyssna”. Inslaget börjar ca 00h 46m 00s och man kan snabbspola dit.
Och grattis Michael, nu är du officiellt “kärnkraftsnörd”, som programledaren så fint uttryckte det.
Micke: Heh, tackar Nils! Frågan är om jag vågar lyssna på detta. 😀
Micke, lite senare: Ok, nu har jag lyssnat på det. Alltid lika “kul” att höra sin egen röst inspelad. Huga…
Ett par missar lyckades jag med. Folkomröstningen för vänstertrafik var inte 1967, den var 1955. 1963 togs beslutet att göra omläggningen, så jag hade rätt i att det tog bara 8 år att köra över folket. Och årtalet 1967 var själva Dagen H.
Jag råkade också kalla Strålsäkerhets-myndigheten för Strålskydds-myndigheten. Förlåt alla ni på SSM som lyssnade.
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