Wednesday, December 24, 2025
ADVT 
Interesting

Playboy Suing Two Canadian Web Publications Over Kate Moss Nude Spread

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 21 Jan, 2016 12:39 PM
    TORONTO — Playboy has filed a lawsuit against two Canadian publications alleging they illegally reproduced revealing photographs of supermodel Kate Moss taken for the U.S. magazine's 60th anniversary.
     
    The copyright suit against Toronto-based Contempo Media and Montreal's Indecent Xposure seeks up to $50,000 in damages from each outlet.
     
    Word of the claim took Nick Younes, founder of Indecent Xposure, by surprise.
     
    "Oh, wow!" Younes said in an interview Thursday. "It's just very surprising that a big company like Playboy would crack down on small publications like us."
     
    Indecent Xposure publishes the online IX Daily, which features articles on fashion, music and culture in Canada. One such article was on the Kate Moss spread two years ago in Playboy, which sparked reports from publications around the world.
     
    At the time, he said, the webzine was making no money and it took down the offending material as soon as Playboy objected in mid-2014.
     
    Younes, who has yet to file a statement of defence, said he believes the news article, which credited the images, was squarely in line with Canadian copyright laws that allows fair use.
     
    "It sounds a bit crazy that they would really go this far, especially a big company like Playboy," he said.
     
    "There was no monetary value as to us putting up that article and making money off the backs of Playboy. That is just pure ridiculousness. The post itself, I'm not even kidding you, had 109 views. It's not like we stole money from them."
     
     
    According to the separate but similar statements of claim, which are replete with the impugned pictures of Moss, Playboy hired two well-known fashion photographers, Mert Alas and Marcus Pigott, to take the images for its January 2014 edition, which sported a bunny-eared Moss on the cover.
     
    The company gave no one permission to publish the pictures but Contempo and Indecent Xposure reproduced or published them going back to December 2013, despite requests from U.S.-based Playboy Enterprises International to stop doing so, the unproven claims before Federal Court allege.
     
    "The defendant at all material times knew or had reasonable grounds for knowing that copyright subsisted in the work and that the plaintiff was the owner or the licensee of the copyright," the claims state.
     
    "By reason of its illegal activities, the defendant has made unjust profits on sales of Internet advertisements on its website, among other revenues, by unlawfully attracting customers to its business, for which the plaintiff has suffered damages."
     
    Screen grabs attached to the claim show Contempo's web publication — Sharp - Canada's Magazine for Men — published its Moss pictorial with numerous images under the heading of "The Kate Moss Anthology."
     
    Contempo president John McGouran said he had not yet seen the claim. He did acknowledge having been contacted at one point by an American firm.
     
    "We didn't do it knowingly, so we made them an offer and never heard back from them, and that was the end of that," McGouran said.
     
    Bob Sotiriadis, the Montreal lawyer acting for Playboy, could not explain why it has taken so long to file the suits, but said the claims speak for themselves.
     
    "The fundamental rule of copyright law is that you cannot reproduce a work or a substantial part of a work without the author's permission," Sotiriadis said.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Financial rewards help smokers kick the butt

    Financial rewards help smokers kick the butt
    Offering small financial incentives doubles smoking cessation rates among socio-economically disadvantaged smokers, especially women, says a new research....

    Financial rewards help smokers kick the butt

    Do smartphone apps help you lose weight?

    Do smartphone apps help you lose weight?
    Smartphone apps that promise to help you lose the extra kilos may not actually be doing so as most users leave them midway, new research says....

    Do smartphone apps help you lose weight?

    New York's first cat cafe opens next month

    New York's first cat cafe opens next month
    New York City cat lovers will be able to tuck in with tabbies next month, when a cafe opens offering feline companionship, a trend imported from Asia which has...

    New York's first cat cafe opens next month

    'Friendly' plants become more diverse

    'Friendly' plants become more diverse
    A study co-authored by Indian-origin scientist Anurag Agrawal has found that when plants develop mutually beneficial relationships with animals...

    'Friendly' plants become more diverse

    DNA analysis to help identify occupant of Greece tomb

    DNA analysis to help identify occupant of Greece tomb
     After the discovery of a human skeleton at the Amphipolis burial complex in northern Greece this week, the focus of experts has turned to the DNA testing...

    DNA analysis to help identify occupant of Greece tomb

    New world record set with 333 km/hour bicycle ride

    New world record set with 333 km/hour bicycle ride
    French daredevil Francois Gissy set a new world record for the highest speed attained while riding a bicycle - reaching a gut churning speed of 333 km/hour in 4.8 seconds....

    New world record set with 333 km/hour bicycle ride