The Vessel, in New York City’s latest luxury neighbourhood, is Hudson Yards’ fancy tourist trap. But it’s also a rights grab when it comes to photography. Initially, spotted by Gothamist, two particular clauses in the Hudson Yard Terms & Conditions were extremely overbearing. Terms and conditions to which you agree as soon as you enter the place. Those clauses have since been combined into a new “My social media posts” clause. The new clause is a little shorter and combines the two previous clauses together with a little more clarification. But it still looks like pretty rights grabby to me.
The two original clauses in the terms & conditions went a little something like this.
So, under the original T&Cs, you are essentially providing a model release as well as a license to use the images to do pretty much anything they want with the images for any purpose. Naturally, once the Internet caught wind of this, judgement was strong and swift. MY CONTENT. If I create, upload, post or send any photographs, audio recordings, or video footage depicting or relating to the Vessel, I grant to Company and its affiliates the irrevocable, unrestricted, worldwide, perpetual, royalty-free, sublicensable, and transferable right and license to use, display, reproduce, perform, modify, transmit, publish, and distribute such photographs, audio recordings, or video footage for any purpose whatsoever in any and all media…
Those two clauses have now been removed and merged into a single clause titled “My Social Media Posts”, which doesn’t really change much. So, it’s changed the language, it’s been toned down a little bit, and they’ve clarified that you do actually own the content you create. However, you’re still granting them a release to use the subject’s likeness, and you’re still granting them a license to use your work for their own promotion however and whenever they want, forever. A spokesperson for Vessel told Gothamist that “the intent of the policy is to allow Hudson Yards to amplify and re-share photos already shared on individual social channels through our website and social channels. This is a practice utilized at nearly all major attractions and we wanted to over communicate, be transparent and disclose toa ll users”. It’s not as all-encompassing as it was, and they no longer demand the ability to license your work to others, but I think if I ever visit this place, I’ll be leaving my camera at home and my phone in my pocket. Whether or not the terms, even the new ones, are actually enforceable is another matter. You can read the complete terms and conditions for yourself here. Do terms like this put you off visiting places? Does it stop you shooting photos of them? Or do you not even care? [via Gizmodo / Lead image: CC by Rhododendrites]