this post was submitted on 19 Jan 2024
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Frankly, people should be entitled to own their likenesses. I'm not a lawyer, but it seems like the examples they mention in the article; - parody, public figures, film rights, etc. - are already pretty well carved out in the courts.
I can't just make a biopic about Michael Jackson... I would need rights to the footage and permission from his estate.
I can't use a photo of Tom Hanks to promote a film he isn't i, even if I took the photo (and therefore own it). If I don't sign the release, they have to blur my face in a documentary.
Celebrities already have certain established rights to the use of their likeness, and in this day and age those rights should really extend to everyone.
That's actually a pretty compelling argument.
But then again, I don't think Nixon signed onto have his head in a glass jar. Is parody not an exception?
Parody is an exception. That's just my point. These legalities already exist. Nixon is also a public figure so his public life is fair game.