Version: 2008

Comments on: Q&A: Going to the mat for photo copyrights

Lane Hartwell got Google to take down a YouTube video that used her photo without permission. Expect more such copyright tussles in the Flickr era.

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Ridiculous
by James7777777 December 20, 2007 6:08 AM PST
A band publishes their song and video for free on the internet for everyone to enjoy and you get a twist in your panties because one of your photos shoes up for a second! They were not selling your photo, they were not hurting your business, they were just making people smile/laugh. You are a bloodsucker. You have no idea what it means to be generous so don't say you are.

Also what kind of idiot photographer are you if you can't figure out how to do your own watermark. There are thousands of tools available some FREE (though I'm sure you don't understand that concept) that can do it for you. It takes about a second and if you are that anal about getting paid you should watermark your images.
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You're twisting it.
by ethana2 December 20, 2007 3:24 PM PST
I don't believe in nonFree culture, but you don't just take what's not yours, whether or not you can. If you think culture should be free, make it. Or try this: buy the rights to the work from the author and then release it under the CC yourself. Eh?

If you don't want to pay someone for something, don't use it. Goodness knows there are alternatives. The Free Software community has gone to great lengths to see that /you/ have the power to create, and digital camcorders get cheaper every day.

So are you going to mooch, or are you going to compete this model that you seem to despise so much out of the mainstream honorably, with your own sweat and tears?

Six months ago, I thought the way you do now.
..and for the record, I think attribution is the right thing to do even with public domain works. If not for the creator, for the viewer. How many times have you heard some cool song in a clip and been left with no way to find out what it was or who it was by? That always bugs me..
Go back to film
by hutwarmer December 20, 2007 6:14 AM PST
So your stupid picture was used for a millisecond in a yYoutube video that was created by a group that will not make a dime from it. And you want to be paid for that? You have got to be kidding.

I also love the 'on the advice of my lawyer' quote. So you mean to tell me that you actually got a lawyer involved (and paid him) over this issue?

Listen, if you are so concerned about your stupid pictures, don't post them on the internet on a public flickr account. Better yet, yu should continue to shoot in film and then you can keep your pictures in a box under your bed, Far away from the Internet Boogeyman who is trying to steal your livelyhood.

Oh, and I am sure 'perfect strangers' are thanking you for sticking up for your copyright rights. Give it a rest already.
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The group WILL profit...
by Travis Ernst December 20, 2007 5:38 PM PST
Thats what you are not understanding. By stealing art and
pictures and not paying for legal use of them (that is the theft)
the bit they ran is promoting ONLY the band for sales. No
credits given to the artists who took the pictures. No royalties
paid to them or contracts were signed before the use of the
artwork.

This is the key point. Artists post their pictures at low res to
promote their works and services on the web with releases if the
pictures were taken of others.

Public squares (say city streets) where there already exist camera
systems and it is not considered a "private" area if you take a
picture from aloft (8th floor) you do not need to obtain 300
releases of everybody in the picture unless you crop in on
specific faces.

This case cited is parallel to ripping MP3's but for the profit of
another party.

Some of us have a heart and expect honesty in this world.
Putting a bug in the corner of pictures is a distraction if you ask
me from a lot of the pictures I've taken. The pain is cleaning up
the photos afterwards!
What do you do for a living that we can use for free???
by DontWeAllKnow December 20, 2007 6:57 AM PST
Lane,
In response to the two bozo stealers who have just posted, I'm another stranger that supports what you are doing. I was fighting the copyright battle in the 80's just to get recognition for the work I had done. I wasn't even asking for money, just affirm that was MY photo that was being used. "Go back to film", yeah that makes sense. I was getting ripped off and I was using film. Didn't make a diff if it was on the net or not. People steal. Violating copyrights is stealing. Oh, I've got an idea!! No more pictures or music!! Yeah, that's what you all want... Cheapskate, ripoff losers.
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What I do for a living that you can use for free.
by James7777777 December 20, 2007 7:11 AM PST
I am a web developer. I consistently release open source code and contribute to open source projects. You can use all of these for free. There have been many cases in the past where someone wanted to use my code for a project that would also be free, or for a non-profit, in those cases I gave them my code for free and I offered free support to help them implement it.

You don't have to be obsessed with squeezing every cent out of non-profits to make a living.
View all 2 replies
Sums it up pretty well.
by James7777777 December 20, 2007 7:13 AM PST
?I think it really is lame to take pictures of people (who don?t get a cut of the profits) at parties, without being commissioned, and then send in invoices for that work when it gets used in a parody video.?

http://www.techcrunch.com/2007/12/18/the-bubble-is-back/#comment-1854861
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Are you kidding with that response???
by hutwarmer December 20, 2007 8:18 AM PST
First of all, what are 'stealers'?, do you mean thieves? I can't really speak for James7777, but I dont get music OR pictures from the internet. So what am I stealing? Because I disgree with her/your point of view I am automatically labeled a thief? Anyway, I digress.

The funny thing about your response was that you claim you were developing on film and not posting your work but it would still be stolen from you? How is that? Was your work so fantastic that people were breaking into your home and stealing your images?

Get over yourself. 'People steal', wow, with a view like that of the world around you, it's no wonder people didnt want to bother with you to get your permission.
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wrong, wrong, wrong
by fredmenace December 20, 2007 10:46 AM PST
Violating copyright is NOT stealing. It is violating a limited civil monopoly that is granted for a limited time with the express intent of INCREASEING THE PUBLIC AVAILABILITY OF CREATIVE IDEAS.

In this day and age of incredibly cheap and easy content creation tools and free distribution options, is there even a NEED for copyright any more? It also doesn't look like there's any dearth of people willing to create interesting content for FREE, so even the incentive justification doesn't seem valid any more.
View all 2 replies
Quite a bit actually.
by Renegade Knight December 20, 2007 12:19 PM PST
The problem most copyright conrol freaks is that they don't think past their own copyright to the copyrights, patents, tradmarkes and other protected things that they do work with and use without thinking about it.

Do you drive? Shower? Eat? You can thank me every day because my work helps makes those things possible. Some of my work is protected under copyright. Some of it under other laws that protect my profession which in turn is designed to keep the public safe, and some of it under laws about trade secretes.

Your painting, writing, photo's or whatever can give away some of my trade secretes and copyrights. But you know what? I really don't care because it does no harm. It's only when someone tries to replicate my work and earn money by copying my own efforts that harm is created. In my case to public safety more than my income.
Getting "Legal" wit it!
by brian_real December 20, 2007 7:04 AM PST
1. Flickr is a public photo site. It doesn't cost anything to join and where she posted her pictures is publicly accessible. Does she really believe she has "copyright" ownership just because she labels it as so?

Flickr is owned by Yahoo! so I thought I'd take a moment and look over both of their policies concerning the posting of photos and other items.

While they both acknowledge the information belongs to the submitter, they also point out that you are using Yahoo! space and as such Yahoo! can do whatever they want with the material in your account or with your account if need be.

2. How many other sites own your supposed "copyrighted" material. If you join Myspace or Facebook do you think your pictures are really yours? When you become a Sam's Club or a Health Club member then have your photo taken do you really think you own that photo? The same could be said for any place, digital or not, where you submit your material.

3. If you really want to protect your proprietary material invest in your own web server and web domain name so that you can claim people are actually stealing it from your site.

I'm not saying she was totally wrong for going after that group for using her picture, but I really think she went about it the wrong way and could have simply tried to negotiate with the band without getting all "legal" about it.

Frivolous lawsuits such as this clog the legal system, but thankfully she recently dropped the lawsuit.
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Oh yeah?
by gearpig December 20, 2007 7:16 AM PST
Read the copyright laws. Yes, she owns the photos. You do not have the right to just take. It is called theft when you take without asking. I know we live in an age of moral relativism, but wrong is wrong, not matter how you spin it. The right thing to do is not always popular, but it is still right, and shouldn't we all strive toward doing the right thing? If you say no, look inside yourself before spouting off.
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no lawsuit + Flickr copyright policies
by Shankland December 20, 2007 7:30 AM PST
As background, there was no lawsuit involved in this particular case, though both sides consulted lawyers.

Also, regarding copyright, just because something is copyable doesn't mean it's legal to do so, and the issue here is not whether Flickr and Yahoo may do something with your photos but whether a third party may. The ease of copying, whether from Flickr or one's own publicly accessible Web server, certainly means you're running a risk by making a photo available. It's easy to break the speed limit, too, but that doesn't mean you'll get off without a ticket if you get caught.

Have you ever converted a friend's CD into MP3 files for your own use? It's a lot harder to do than retyping a book and then selling the result, but in both cases it violates copyright. Personally, I like some ideas behind the Creative Commons licensing regime, which permits photo sharing within various limits, but I can see how a professional photographer might not want to go that route.

Here are some things Flickr has to say about the issue:

http://flickr.com/help/photos/?search=copyright#87

How can I copyright my photos?

In most parts of the world, including the U.S., Canada, EU countries, and Japan, you are automatically granted copyrights to your photos.


http://flickr.com/help/website/?search=copyright#24

What considerations have been given to copyright?

...

If you see your work in someone else's photostream, please submit a Notice of Infringement to the Yahoo! Copyright Team. Information on how to do this correctly is here, and there's a link in the footer.


http://flickr.com/help/general/#147

I'd like to use a photo I found on Flickr. How do I do that?

We don't act as matchmakers, so contact the photographer yourself. Only members of Flickr can send messages to one another, so if you haven't created an account, that's your first step.

As a member of Flickr, you can move your mouse over someone's buddy icon and click the little arrow to open the "person menu." Then select "Send FlickrMail" and compose your message. When you contact a photographer, it's best to include as much info as possible about the photo, yourself, and how you want to use the photo.
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typical hypocrite
by buffalosam December 20, 2007 7:15 AM PST
So she refuses to take any pictures unless she gets compensated for them because she earns her living being a photographer, give me a break. By her logic because I make a living being as an engineer I should not help my friends or family by explaining how things work and or possbly fixing them because I understand the principles of how they work or my work has some how made me an expert at various tasks. I have a close relative that is doctor, could you imagine him saying no, or asking for money if I asked him to look at my kids ear or a recent prescription. She can fight her fight with RIAA and the like for me I am about making the pie bigger for all, not just worried about my little slice.
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Missed Point
by scot629 December 20, 2007 7:50 AM PST
Like the lady says, "The bottom line is, I have to make sure I
am able to make a living. It's called survival. Having said that, I
have always been, and will continue to be, generous with my
photography. But it's my choice to make...I should not be
forced into it."

The point is that she does help charity and good causes with
her work, when she's given the chance. How would you feel,
Mr. Engineer, if as an independent consultant, you found out
that work you'd done for a client was being sold by that client
to another vendor, without your permission and in violation of
the contract you had with them? Kinda puts things in
perspective, doesn't it? The bottom line is that if either of you
are not compensated for your work, you'll change professions
and soon society will soon have no one to provide that
service/skill. It's not about her slice of pie, it's about having pie
at all. Copyright is all about keeping that balance, and making
it easy for people to post notice when they expect
compensation, yet still allow them to give it away when they
choose.
Hypocrite?
by johnrdupree December 20, 2007 7:57 AM PST
She created something and someone else stole it from her; it's that simple. If you patented an invention and someone used it in their product without compensating you, you would pursue payment just like she is.
She even said "I have always been, and will continue to be, generous with my photography" but that doesn't allow someone to take what is not theirs and then refuse to pay for it.
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Yes I can
by demner December 20, 2007 8:51 AM PST
I absolutely would expect your doctor relative to say 'no'. The fact you would even ask him to donate his time to your assuredly unworthy cause shows what kind of person YOU are.
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Uh, yeah you shouldn't...
by mattumanu December 22, 2007 1:01 PM PST
If you value your talent at all, you wont be giving out free advice. Your work should be compensated, because before long people will expect you to give it away for free.

And a Doctor is not an engineer, but think about this for a second. Let's say you get your relative to look at your kid's ear, and this doctor relative makes a bad diagnosis and your kid winds up with a perforated eardrum due to unchecked infection. Do you think a Judge is going to compensate you or your kid for malpractice after you sought medical attention under the table?
If you dont want this to happen
by newgun2000 December 20, 2007 8:47 AM PST
DONT POST ANY OF YOUR PICKS ONLINE
waste of time
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If you don't want your car stolen
by gjl229 December 20, 2007 9:26 AM PST
don't park it in a public place?
View all 3 replies
No, not really simple
by hutwarmer December 20, 2007 9:56 AM PST
We do have fair use laws in this country.

Again, this was a band who made a snarky little video to amuse people, not make money. The picture was shown for a quick second during the video.

The picture was available to the public for viewing. Nobody profited directly from the video. Seems like fair use to me.
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Some common misconceptions about Fair Use
by inetdog December 20, 2007 10:03 AM PST
First of all, we do not have Fair Use laws in this country. What we have is copyright laws with Fair Use provisions that state what types of incidental use are not considered copyright violations.
A similar case is that we do not have Truth Laws in the US, but we do have libel laws which allow truth as a defense against a libel action.
That may seem like a small point, but it is critical to understanding a bigger problem:

Too many people interpret the term "fair use" to mean anything that they think is fair or equitable (such as "a one second use of a photo must be fair"), but in reality the term "fair use" has a very narrowly defined legal meaning in the context of copyright law.
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Are you still an artist...
by faust December 20, 2007 9:56 AM PST
if nobody sees your crappy work or do you go by your real name of oh waiter?
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Old mentality won't die yet...
by Potmos December 20, 2007 10:35 AM PST
We all have to give up on copyright, patents,
intellectual "property" and other foul habits of
the Old World.
The New World, the one being born right now,
between humans freely communicating with each
other, will hopefully crush down every form of
selfishness. We need a new mentality of
cooperation and sharing, if we are to survive in
the rising New World.
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ironically
by fredmenace December 20, 2007 10:57 AM PST
Ironically, much of the misunderstanding over the nature of copyright, and confusing them with perpetual property rights, is a RECENT invention in law (within the last 30 years or so), due to corporate influence on government.

The writers of the constitution and many others of the time, as well as lawmakers and courts for nearly 200 years afterwards, considered the idea of anyone being able to "own" an idea to be odious, and said so repeatedly. Haven't heard that in a while (since Disney et al took control of our government).
Its called socialism and doesn't work
by grossph December 20, 2007 11:09 AM PST
You idea of the new world utopia doesn't exist. Your argument is basically for socialism, which has never worked. name one socialist society that works effectively.

You are probably about 25 years old if that and have not met enough people in your life to understand how humans work.
Nothing is new under the Sun
by alegr December 20, 2007 11:42 AM PST
"We all have to give up on private property, added value, money and other foul habits of the Old World. The New World, the one being born right now, between humans freely trading with each other, will hopefully crush down every form of selfishness. We need a new mentality of cooperation and sharing, if we are to survive in the rising New World."

That didn't happen. Communist experiment failed, many times in many places (including, strangely, first pilgrims settlements in North America). It required ideal people. Real people, though, needed fair compensation and material stimuli.
You cannot force people to give everything away AND expect them to be productive. Either this or that.
All she's accomplishing...
by fredmenace December 20, 2007 10:43 AM PST
All she's managing to do here is create yet another story that gets more people to say "gee, this copyright stuff is really BS, maybe we should just get rid of it?"
Reply to this comment
nope
by fredmenace December 20, 2007 10:51 AM PST
You do not "own" anything that is copyrighted (or patented). The idea that anyone could own an idea was always considered odious until megacorporations like Disney in recent years took control of the US government, whereafter they re-wrote the laws to increase their profits (note: THEIR profits, as in corporate profits, not the authors'/composers'/other creators' profits).

The entire intent of copyright and patent is to increase the widespread availability of new ideas for the PUBLIC to benefit from. It is explicitly NOT a property right, and confers no actual ownership - just a limited monopoly, for a limited time.

That the public believes otherwise is a testimony to the effectiveness of the propoganda campaigns from the major content corporations and their industry associations.
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(comment in wrong place)
by fredmenace December 20, 2007 10:53 AM PST
The parent comment was supposed to be a reply to another comment, not the story. It has been reposted in the appropriate location.
Or lock the door.
by James7777777 December 20, 2007 10:55 AM PST
If you don't want your car stolen, lock the door. There are many free and extremely simple ways to watermark and image.
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She did lock the door
by Silver_2000 December 20, 2007 12:49 PM PST
She retained copyright.

And yes people did make money off the video. Its not important who did. You tube isnt a non profit, they made advertising money.

The idea that all copyrights shouldn't exist in the "new world" is not really matching with the new world. YouTube and all the other companies that make up the new world exist and profit because of copyrights.

As was mentioned previously many of the opinions here are immature and not well thought out.

When you take away peoples ability to make money on their work you assure that there will soon be no content to steal. The folks who choose to give away their work are making their income some other way.
Did the author make any money off the video?
by basraw December 20, 2007 11:00 AM PST
Maybe sue Youtube.
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Reality
by Renegade Knight December 20, 2007 12:12 PM PST
Photographers take photo's of things in the world. I support their right to do that.

However in those photo's are copyrighted, patented, and tradmarked items.

It really isn't reasonable to post credits and seek permission on every item in a photo. The can of Coke, the design in the fabric on clothing, the landscape design, the parking lots engineering. These items are all protected and yet it's fair use to take a photo of them. Even if one person happens to be carrying a photo...

The YouTube video cost her nothing and copyright was designed to protect her ability to market her work for money. Nothing more.

If it really is about control she better sign up for a long hard fight to publish a photo because she's going to have to ger Coke's permission to use their tradmark, their Copyright permission, the Clothes maker's permission the Architects permission for the design on the building (which is protecte) the Engineers Permission for the use of his designed and patented lighting sytems light spread and color, the civil engineer design visible in the parking, building, and landscape, and so on.

You can take it too far way to easily. She's on the first step of the journey to make her own job hard.
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Exactly
by The_Decider December 20, 2007 1:40 PM PST
All she is doing is hurting herself by acting like a greedy jackass.
A wee peek into Photography.
by Penguinisto December 20, 2007 1:42 PM PST
A mind-spanking primer on how all this works can be found here:
http://www.danheller.com/model-release.html

Trust me - gets real murky, real fast. It can (and does) get complex when trademarks and people are involved.

IOW, the job is already hard. And ugly.

/P
Copyrights
by The_Decider December 20, 2007 1:41 PM PST
Copyright grants a limited monopoly for a limited time.

Then that work is supposed to go into the public domain.

The point of copyright is NOT to protect profits.

The point is to encourage creativity and fill the public domain. A healthy public domain is one of the reasons our country grew so quickly. The perversion of copyrights in the last 50 years and thus the decline of the public domain is one of the reasons we are decaying so quickly.

This lady lost nothing. It is greed and stupidity on her part.
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Re:Copyrights
by alegr December 20, 2007 5:11 PM PST
The point of copyright is to encourage creativity _by_ protecting profits. It's not "the healthy power domain" this country grew so quickly, it's spirit of enterpreneurship, fueled by profit expectation and opportunity.

Public wealth created by said profits, in turn, feeds creative folks. In poor countries, those creative types just die out, because nobody would pay them anything. If you deny copyright protection, nobody would pay artists here, either.
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A lot of people seem to think it was fair use
by unknown unknown December 20, 2007 4:01 PM PST
Even the writer of the LawGeek blog, who claims to be friends with her says the use was probably fair.
http://lawgeek.typepad.com/lawgeek/2007/12/copyright-fair.html
TechDirt wasn't very kind to her argument either.
http://www.techdirt.com/

Copyright doesn't ensure you're right to make a living, it only exists to encourage "useful arts and sciences" and it has limits. Some uses of your work can be made without your permission or any compensation being paid.
Reply to this comment
Theft is theft
by luis alvas December 20, 2007 5:18 PM PST
if you take what is not yours, you are a thief. Rationalizing a lot of
excuses about how you have a "right" to steal is just more hot air.
And any artist is a creator. Stealing creation is still stealing. The
music group who stole these images for their own benefit
(publicity!) are simply thieves. No ifs, no buts.
View all 2 replies
What if
by The_Decider December 20, 2007 7:39 PM PST
I actually owned one of her pictures and had in hanging on my wall.

Sometime later I decide to sell my house and post a video tour online. The picture shows up in the video and based on the video the house sells.

Is this moron somehow entitled to any profits I might make from the house?

Did I violate copyright.

No, fair use you say.

What if I got sick of the picture and sold it?

Does she have a right to any profit I might have made?

No, fair use you say.

Well, that is what this case amounts to, fair use.

She is greedy, and the only thing she will do is damage what little potential for a career as an "artist" she does have.
Reply to this comment
Decider comments
by Travis Ernst December 20, 2007 8:20 PM PST
No, you paid for a printing of the picture, what you were given is
an issue of the print. That print is yours. You can do what you
want with it. Make a paper airplane out of it, emergency printer
paper (I hope not!) resell it years down the road if you wish.
That ISSUING is yours. The artist has already made their cut on
the initial sale.

As for house sales and artwork showing up. You are not using it
to sell other artists work. The couch is made by a company,
should they get a cut? No. Should JVC or Sony get a cut if you
see their speakers? No. If the home has a video tour you are
simply trying to sell the property the art does NOT come with it.
Buyers know this in 98% of the cases.

The last line is key. IF artwork (large statues, rare paintings)
were to come with it that may have a small bearing and you may
want a waiver from the artist so they don't go after a percentage
of the sale.

However, explain to me how the eye can see the details of a
painting or picture from 10-20 feet away? With the details
unclear when you fisheye a room, the artist won't have much
standing compared to a picture of the artwork alone where you
can make out all the details.

Remember; the initial argument was another artist took her
photo and used it in their video without permission or any
contract or agreement for use of such.

You are saying in your distorted argument that it would be fine
for me to use copyrighted material such as music (lets use an
overprotective band) say Metallica and mix it with video footage
I have, put it on my site. I'd have their lawyers on my door in a
few minutes for not having any form of contract to pay them for
use of song. This case is no different.
View reply
The real point???
by grayboe December 21, 2007 4:43 AM PST
To me the real point is the length of copyright. If the copyright were shortened to a reasonable length of time ...say 25 years. There would be so much in the public domain I can't imagine anyone not being able to find what they want.

As long as we have the "Mickey Mouse" copyright laws these issues will continue to come up. We all know the copyright for Mickey may never go away. Just imagine is Shakespear could have done that.
Reply to this comment
Even her friend's think it's fair use. - lawgeek
by James7777777 December 21, 2007 7:47 AM PST
http://lawgeek.typepad.com/lawgeek/2007/12/copyright-fair.html
Reply to this comment
then if the pic is so important
by newgun2000 December 22, 2007 3:16 PM PST
DONT POST IT ONLINE.
you know these computes copy pics with little effort. If i had a very valuable pic I would keep in to myself
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