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Protecting the Right of Publicity Open Article in Another Window
February 2007
The right of publicity, which protects individuals from commercial misuse of their identities, is increasingly being pitted against the public politices behind the Copyright Act and the First Amendment—and losing out.
General Credit
1. California recognizes the common law right of publicity but provides no explicit statutory protection for it.  True  False
2. The right of publicity always dies with the individual.  True  False
3. In recent decisions, the First Amendment’s protection of freedom of speech usually trumps the right of publicity.  True  False
4. In <i>Laws v. Sony Music Entertainment, Inc.</i>, the Ninth Circuit held that the First Amendment preempts a right of publicity claim.  True  False
5. Since the Copyright Act was passed, most courts have found that it preempts right of publicity claims.  True  False
6. When an individual asserts a right of publicity in a licensed work, federal preemption can exist only if the work is deemed “fixed in a tangible medium.”  True  False
7. To establish a common law claim of the right of publicity, in addition to showing a resulting injury a plaintiff must prove: the defendant’s use of his or her identity, the appropriation of his or her name or likeness to some advantage, and the lack of plaintiff’s consent.  True  False
8. In <i>Fleet v. CBS, Inc.</i>, a California appellate court held that films, because they are based on fleeting dramatic performances, cannot obtain copyright protection.  True  False
9. The Ninth Circuit has consistently rejected the argument that the right of publicity can protect an individual singer’s vocal style.  True  False
10. Courts have upheld right-of-publicity claims based on soundalikes, even when the defendant obtained a valid license to use the underlying composition.  True  False
11. The court in Laws held that use of an actual vocal performance by a copyright licensee may also constitute unauthorized appropriation of the singer’s “persona.”  True  False
12. Courts have held that the use of “transformative elements” may strengthen the First Amendment’s competing interest to defeat a right-of-publicity claim.  True  False
13. Misuse of an individual’s “persona” cannot be the subject of a right-to-publicity claim, because it is amorphous and cannot be fixed tangibly.  True  False
14. Both copyright and the right of publicity serve to protect the same thing: an individual’s investment in his or her artistic labors.  True  False
15. The California court in <i>Fleet v. CBS, Inc.</i> held that an actor’s rights in a film performance are similar to the rights he or she maintains in a still picture taken and misappropriated for another person’s use.  True  False
16. In the <i>Fleet</i> decision, the court opined that an actor can protect against use of a dramatic work such as a film performance by retaining the copyright.  True  False
17. In <i>Toney v. L’Oreal USA, Inc.</i>, the court rejected a right-of-publicity claim for the alleged misuse of an image in a print advertisement, holding that the model’s identity was legally analogous to a “work of authorship.”  True  False
18. In <i>Hoffman v. Capital Cities/ABC, Inc.</i>, the Ninth Circuit rejected a traditional First Amendment analysis in finding that computer alterations of film stills of actor Dustin Hoffman’s character in <i>Tootsie</i> violated Hoffman’s right of publicity.  True  False
19. In <i>C.B.C. Distribution and Marketing, Inc. v. Major League Baseball Advanced Media, L.P.</i>, a Missouri district court affirmed the right of a fantasy baseball league to use players’ names and playing records, noting that no impermissible appropriation of likeness was involved.  True  False