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Throwback Thursday: Can I Use This Photo on Social Media?

For today’s Throwback Thursday article, we are featuring our blog post on sharing someone else’s image online.

If you’ve ever come across a picture on Google or another website and wondered if you could use it on your own social media platforms, this article that the JC Sweet Team found on Hootsuite is for you!

Can I Use This Photo on Social Media?

Here’s what you need to know before you share someone else’s image online.

What is image copyright?

Copyright is a concept that protects all creative works. While it may be frustrating to navigate when trying to find images for your social media posts, keep in mind that it benefits you too. After all, the same copyright laws that protect photographers’ rights to their images protect your rights to all of the content you create and share online.

So, what exactly is photo copyright? Nuances of copyright vary by country, but basically, copyright defines the ownership of creative works and how those works can be used. In the United States, section 106 of the Copyright Law states that only the copyright holder can:

  • reproduce the work
  • make derivative works based on the work
  • distribute the work to the public
  • display the work publicly

The short version? If you created an original artistic or written work, you own it—even if you never registered it with a copyright office or other official body—and that ownership gives you exclusive rights to display and reproduce what you created.

If you use a photo someone else created without their permission, you could very well be in breach of their image copyright—even if they posted it publicly to Twitter, Facebook, or any other social network.

What about fair use?

Fair use is an exception to copyright limits that allows copyrighted works to be used without permission for specific “transformative” purposes that serve the public good.

There is no clear yes-or-no guideline for whether any particular use qualifies as fair use, but a court considering a fair use lawsuit (yes, lawsuit—do you really want to take this on?), will look at the following:

  • Is it for commercial, non-profit, or educational use?
  • Is the copyrighted work highly creative, or more fact-based?
  • How much of the work is reproduced?
  • How does the use affect the potential market for the original work?

Some common examples of fair use are parody and criticism (such as a movie or book review that quotes a line or two of dialogue). The truth is that simply using someone else’s photo in your social media post is unlikely to meet the guidelines for fair use.

When can you use someone else’s image?

Simply put, you can use someone else’s image when they give you permission to do so. That doesn’t mean you have to call up the photographer every time you want to use an image. Creative Commons images are a great example—the licenses themselves indicate permission, so you don’t need to do any further legwork.

Regramming photos from a branded hashtag or an Instagram contest is another example, as long as you follow the regram best practices, including giving credit where credit is due.

Stock photography sites are another great option. Sites like iStock provide huge libraries of photos appropriate for just about any purpose, with licensing fees based on the size of image and intended use. With the quality images and sheer volume of photos to choose from, a subscription to a quality stock photo site may be a good option for many businesses.

Where to find free images for your social media post

Fortunately for those who don’t have a stock photography budget, there are also plenty of sites that offer free stock photography images. Some of these sites, like Gratisography, are created by photographers themselves, and offer a wide range of images, from the obviously useful to the curiously bizarre.

Others, like Unsplash, are collections of images licensed under Creative Commons Zero, meaning you can use them for any purpose without attribution.

You can use Google image search to find free images, as long as you proceed with extreme caution. You need to use the Advanced Image Search to specify that you are looking for images that are “free to use or share, even commercially.”

Even then, it’s a good idea to click through to check for the appropriate license on the page itself.

Flickr

Flickr is another great site to check for Creative Commons images, but once again, you need to make sure you are searching only for images that allow your specific use.

Just because a photo is on Flickr doesn’t mean you can use it—many images on the photo-sharing site have all rights reserved or use a Creative Commons license that limits how the image can be used.

While photo copyright may seem like an annoying inconvenience when you’re looking for an image for your next social media post, just remember that those same copyright laws protect all of the content you create and share online. With so many legitimate sources of free images for social media sharing, there’s no excuse to use copyrighted work without permission. It’s unfair to the photographer and, more selfishly, it puts both you and your business at risk.

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