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 Indian PM Modi uses Nepali photographers photo without giving credit
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Posted on 10-21-14 7:28 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Narendra Modi's Page:


Photographer Bimal Nepal's Page
https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=10152581639394442&set=a.10151753385354442.1073741833.516729441&type=1&theater


Last edited: 21-Oct-14 07:54 AM

 
Posted on 10-21-14 9:01 AM     [Snapshot: 185]     Reply [Subscribe]
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Don't you guys have any work then making issue of small stuff? You might have posted pics from internet without giving a f**K who took it in your facebook. If he does it , it is a big issue.


 
Posted on 10-21-14 11:19 PM     [Snapshot: 722]     Reply [Subscribe]
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arey yar, nachahine kurama tauko dukhai.
 
Posted on 10-22-14 9:00 AM     [Snapshot: 921]     Reply [Subscribe]
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Hindustan Times covers this issue.
http://www.hindustantimes.com/world-news/modi-s-dhanteras-photo-on-facebook-creates-a-flutter-on-social-media/article1-1278208.aspx#.VEe_akL8uMs.facebook








Modi’s Dhanteras photo on Facebook creates a flutter on social media
Utpal Parashar, Hindustan Times
Kathmandu, October 22, 2014
 
First Published: 19:30 IST(22/10/2014)
Last Updated: 19:32 IST(22/10/2014)

US-based photographer of Nepali origin Bimal Nepal posted a beautiful photo of Diwali lights on his Facebook and Instagram pages on Tuesday morning.

 

The photo of container candles placed in an S-shaped pattern on a wooden floor was clicked last year by Nepal. He posted it on the social media sites this year to wish his friends a Happy Diwali.

A few hours later almost a similar photo or the same photo with some digital alterations appeared on the Facebook page of Prime Minister Narendra Modi as he shared Dhanteras greetings with his followers.

There was no credit given to Nepal for the use of his photo without permission. The surprised photographer has now taken this issue of copyright violation to social media.

“I am truly honored that Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi is using one of my photographs in his Facebook page. My greatest question and concern is—there is no credit for the photographer,” Nepal wrote on Facebook.

He mentions that the photo was clicked in the dining room of his Cambridge Massachusetts home with help of his daughter Abina who set up the Diwali lights on the floor.

“Of course that photo was taken by me. It is on Flickr (photo sharing website) with all the metadata. It is protected by US copyright law,” Nepal wrote to HT in reply to questions about his claim. 

“I am one of the greatest fans of Mr. Modi but how he uses this photo is totally unacceptable. I am looking for compensation and the appropriate credit,” he added.

Nepal has found support from many on social media who have urged him to raise the issue with Modi’s office. Some of his friends claim to have written about it to the Prime Minister’s social media team.

“Apparently this image was created by photographer Bimal Nepal (living in Masschusetts) and has been used without courtesy or credit,” eminent Nepali journalist Kanak Mani Dixit commented on Modi’s Facebook page.

Nepal has also found support on Twitter with some expressing “serious concern” and others suggesting him to contact the Prime Minister’s office.

- See more at: http://www.hindustantimes.com/world-news/modi-s-dhanteras-photo-on-facebook-creates-a-flutter-on-social-media/article1-1278208.aspx#.VEe_akL8uMs.facebook



 
Posted on 10-22-14 11:32 AM     [Snapshot: 1019]     Reply [Subscribe]
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This certainly isn't "small stuff". PM's secretary/advisor and/or whoever's responsible for his social media outlets should apologize and give credit. If I were the photographer, I'd have probably sued them. 
 
Posted on 10-22-14 2:57 PM     [Snapshot: 1158]     Reply [Subscribe]
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A photographic journal writes about this issue.
http://petapixel.com/2014/10/22/prime-minister-india-stole-photo/




primeminster

What would you do if you found your photograph misused, not by a celebrity or a company, but by the head of government of a country? That’s the question facing Cambridge, Massachusetts-based photographer Bimal Nepal.

Nepal, a photojournalist whose work has appeared in National Geographic, recently found his photograph shared without permission by the prime minister of India.

Here’s the photograph in question that was originally published to Nepal’s Flickr page in November 2012:

8579143615_5ce178b75c_z

The photograph is of the Hindu festival Diwali (AKA the “festival of lights”), and can be found on Flickr through searches for that term.

Two days ago, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi published a modified version of that photograph on his Facebook page to wish his 23.4 million followers “Greetings on Dhanteras.” It quickly amassed nearly 450,000+ Likes, 40,000+ shares, and 15,000+ comments:

share

Nepal says that he was honored to see his photo shared by someone so prominent, but was miffed by the lack of credit and the fact that no one asked permission:

One of my photographs has been used by one of my greatest heroes, a true leader Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi in his Facebook page. I shot this photo in my dining room last year with the help of my daughter Abina. She set up the candle lights on Diwali in our home in Cambridge Massachusetts. I am truly honored!

My greatest question and concern is – there is no credit for the photographer?! What will happen so called © copyright issue? He did not ask for the permission. Any suggestion?

Nepal's appeal for help on his Facebook page.

Nepal’s appeal for help on his Facebook page.

Supporters soon began voicing their support of Nepal. Sree Sreenivasan, the Chief Digital Officer at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in NYC, passed the story on to editors of newspapers in India asking if anyone had contacts in the prime minister’s office.

highlighted

The story has begun appearing in mainstream publications. The Hindustan Times published one piece about it.

So far though, nothing has changed. The photo remains up and intact on the prime minister’s page without any mention of Nepal. We will update this post if/when there are any developments.




 
Posted on 10-22-14 4:02 PM     [Snapshot: 1208]     Reply [Subscribe]
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After a bit of an investigation, it seems like few wallpaper websites had taken Bimal Nepal's picture from his Flickr album and made the picture available for free downlaod in their respective websites.

http://wallpaperpassion.com/download-wallpaper/39898/diwali-diya-wallpaper.html

http://hdwallpapersx.com/diwali-wishes-wallpaper/happy-diwali-2013-greetings-hd-wallpapers/

Now, someone from Modi's staff must have downloaded from those sites thinking it's free stuff.

So it's probobably those websites that need to be answerable.

 


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