Fuck Reddit and Fuck Spez.
I’m just starting to realise how fucked up Denmark is.
Right?
What the fuck, Denmark?
In Denmark, the “right of integrity means that even in cases where you are allowed to make use of a work, you are not allowed to change it or use it in a way or in a context that infringes the author’s literary or artistic reputation or uniqueness,” a resource for Danish researchers noted.
Infringes reputation is so sooo broad. It comes down to who does the judge like the most, no? Reddit mods will always be way down on the list, as the judicial inclined tend to be technologically illiterate.
Also, the reddit mod is not jailed. In most of europe “prison” sentences like this are conditional sentences.
Yeah, it also seems weird cause things like remakes, parodies, trailers, etc. all would technically violate that law.
Someone once explained it to me.
Some think the law should describe illegal behaviour. And that the law should apply the same to everyone. Those people are a minority.
What happens in practice is that most people just want to be able to punish people they don’t like. So they don’t mind overly broad, generic laws, as in their mind it will only be used against the other. Especially in (former) high-trust societies.
And in practice the selective enforcement can work for a long, long time, too. Until a shift of power occurs, and the same laws are enacted just as selectively, but directed differently. Then they surprise pikachu.
Believe it or not, but there are externalities to the polemics you are describing.
The ostentatious posturing (I am a tiny minority that is virtuous, everyone else just wants to punish people and doesn’t want the law to apply to everyone equally) is pretty ignorant. I’ve lived in multiple countries across North America, Europe and Asia, it’s clear that you haven’t thought about this.
It’s comically easy to find well known (locally) examples where even the non polemical version of your arguement doesn’t hold.
Do you even know if that’s true for Denmark? It is in the US, but I doubt it is, globally.
Except a remake would not use the original actor’s image, a trailer is part of marketing the actor agreed to, and parodies are covered by fair use.
The qoute says the “authors”, so this law is not exclusively tied to actors, but generally works of art and the people involved in creating it. Thats why I called out things like remakes.
And while you are right that in many of my examples there would probably be contracts to avoid these issues, my point was to show how easy it is to break this law (and that copyright owners do it all the time themselves).
Also, fair use for parodies is not a thing in all countries - not sure if it is in Denmark.
Fair Use exists only in the US. I believe it is part of the reason why the US became so culturally dominant. It certainly is why the internet is US dominated. European copyright laws are stifling.
Seems like this was based on the people whose images were being exploited complaining to the court, so their view of what infringes their reputation.
Damn, this is seriously fucked up and dystopian.
You shoot a movie, why cannot I share my favourite scenes with other people?
Same reason you can’t turn someone’s social media photos into a porno mag for sexual gratification. It’s unethical and exploitative.
A film is wildly different from somebody’s social media posts
In what way?
It’s a movie. Like you and I would go see at the cinema. But it happens to be pornographic in nature. These actually used to come on DVD before the Internet was a thing, and would be sold at the back of the DVD store or blockbuster behind a curtain.
It is created and published with a financial incentive, and is otherwise public.
Title had me smiling in the first half. Ngl.
Ohmagerd! Which actresses nude scenes was he sharing so I can make sure I don’t share them?
From the TorrentFreak article referenced by Ars Techina (https://torrentfreak.com/redditor-convicted-for-sharing-nude-scenes-in-landmark-moral-rights-copyright-case):
The prosecution successfully argued that by taking scenes out of their original artistic context and sexualizing them, the defendant violated the integrity of the actors and directors…
One scene featured actress Signe Egholm Olsen in ‘Nordkraft’
If you’re serious, Reddit had/has an extreme fixation for clipping scenes with Alexandra Daddario, Jennifer Lawrence, Megan Fox, Sydney Sweeney, and Ana De Armas.
They’d get posted to /r/celebs and watch it for the plot.
I’d assume they’re danish actors based on the article
the subreddit ThatTrueDetectiveSceneWithAlexandraDaddario was peak reddit times.
Was /r/TTDSWAD for anyone curious
Yeah but this was on a Danish subreddit, focusing on Danish actresses.
I bet there was a lot of delicious content, but the sub has been banned.





