"In response to the new Facebook guidelines, I hereby declare that
my copyright is attached to all of my personal details, illustrations,
comics, paintings, professional photos and videos, etc. (as a result of
the Berner Convention). For commercial use of the above my written
consent is needed at all times!"
You may have seen that very message pop up -- perhaps time and time again -- in your Facebook feed. The message has been making the rounds on the social network.
It encourages people to copy and paste the text and post it on their
own walls if they want to be placed "under protection of copyright
laws."
It's a frightful message and those worried that Facebook will own their
photos or other media are posting it -- unaware that it is a hoax.
Here's the truth: Facebook doesn't own your media and there is no such
thing as the Berner Convention.
"We have noticed some statements that suggest otherwise and we wanted to
take a moment to remind you of the facts -- when you post things like
photos to Facebook, we do not own them," Facebook spokesman Andrew Noyes
said in a statement. "Under our terms (https://www.facebook.com/legal/terms),
you grant Facebook permission to use, distribute, and share the things
you post, subject to the terms and applicable privacy settings."
Brad Shear, a Washington-area attorney and blogger who is an expert on
social media, said the message was "misleading and not true." He said
that when you agree to Facebook's terms of use you provide Facebook
a "non-exclusive, transferable, royalty-free, worldwide license to use
any content you post. You do not need to make any declarations about
copyright issues since the law already protects you. The privacy
declaration [in this message] is worthless and does not mean anything."
Facebook users cannot retroactively
negate any of the privacy or copyright terms they agreed to when they
signed up for their Facebook accounts nor can they unilaterally alter or
contradict terms instituted by Facebook simply by posting a contrary
legal notice on their Facebook walls.
This isn't the first time a message like this has popped up on Facebook.
A similar message made the rounds in June and a few years ago as well.
Bottom line? Don't bother copying, pasting, and posting. It was a hoax before and is still a hoax now.
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