Rock Legend Brian May Slams Photog for Protecting Her Copyright
Queen lead guitarist Brian May is lashing out at a photographer after she reported his copyright infringement to Instagram and got his account temporarily disabled.
May says that he’s “usually very careful to credit anyone whose photos” he posts, but he “must have forgotten” in this particular case.
He takes exception to the fact that instead of attempting to contact May (which can be difficult to do given his celebrity status), Kremer instead went straight to Instagram with the complaint.
May says Instagram disabled his account until he spent 45 minutes of his time getting the issue sorted out and his 119,000-follower account reactivated.
“You not only took my picture and are evidently exploiting my image, and making money off me without so much as a ‘by your leave’ – but you actually stop me using a picture of myself,” May writes in his public message to Kremer. “What a crazy world we live in these days.”
He then threatens to keep Kremer from ever shooting another Queen concert in the future.
“If I ever discover that you are at one of our concerts in future, look out, because, logically, I will be tempted to have you thrown out,” May writes.
Here’s the full post and message:
While some commenters on the post have voiced support for May, many are defending the photographer’s actions, stating that May doesn’t understand how photography copyright works and that the photographer was rightfully protecting her work from May’s copyright infringement.
Others have taken issue with May’s claim that the photographer is “exploiting” May’s image by photographing him in concert.
Interestingly enough, May has been publicly active in defending his own copyright in recent years. Last year, Queen spoke out on Twitter after their famous song “We Are the Champions” was played when Donald Trump walked onto the stage at the Republican National Convention after securing the nomination.
An unauthorised use at the Republican Convention against our wishes – Queen
— Queen (@QueenWillRock) July 19, 2016
Back in 2012, May also co-signed a letter written to Britain’s prime minister at the time, David Cameron, urging him to help fight online piracy.