
When I was in college studying videography and photography, I expected most of my coursework to stay in the creative lane. Camera operation, lighting, editing, storytelling, and the technical side of building something visual that communicates. Then I took a class that was often called Media Law, sometimes labeled Mass Media Law or Communications Law, depending on the school. It pulled me into a different side of the same world.
What made it so interesting was how directly it connected to what I was doing with a camera. The law was not abstract. It was the framework that decides who owns an image, who can copy it, who can sell it, and what happens when someone takes it without permission. Once you see that, you stop thinking of a photograph as only a creative output. You start seeing it as protected property.
This first article is the foundation of the whole three-part series. Before we talk about privacy, releases, public recording, or monetizing video, we need to answer the first question that drives nearly everything else.
Who owns the image?
Podcast Notes: https://www.moneymakerphotography.com/photography-copyright-law-photographers/
Photography Clips Podcast: https://www.moneymakerphotography.com/podcast/
Music From the Doctor's Office: https://www.moneymakerphotography.com/music-from-the-doctors-office/
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