Joke Collection Website - Blessing messages - Colleagues accused me of violating his right to Xiao Xiangquan. It's not enough for me to apologize by phone. I have to apologize publicly. I can't take it anymore. I have to go to the police station,

Colleagues accused me of violating his right to Xiao Xiangquan. It's not enough for me to apologize by phone. I have to apologize publicly. I can't take it anymore. I have to go to the police station,

Colleagues accused me of violating his right to Xiao Xiangquan. It's not enough for me to apologize by phone. I have to apologize publicly. I can't take it anymore. I have to go to the police station, it's not what you said. The General Principles of the Civil Law of People's Republic of China (PRC) and Article 100 of the Civil Law of People's Republic of China (PRC) stipulate that citizens have the right to portrait and may not use their portraits for profit without their consent.

Article 120 of the General Principles of the Civil Law of People's Republic of China (PRC) stipulates that if a citizen's right to name, portrait, reputation and honor is infringed, he has the right to demand that the infringement be stopped, his reputation be restored, the influence be eliminated, an apology be made, and compensation be paid.

First, what is "portrait right".

"Portrait" has different understandings from different angles. Portrait (or photography) in the artistic sense refers to an ornamental modeling work that makes the image of the portrait owner reappear under the material carrier through artistic means such as painting and photography.

The right of portrait in the legal sense includes the personal interests enjoyed by the owner of portrait based on his portrait. Generally has the following legal characteristics:

1. Portrait is an artistic expression of the appearance of a natural person.

Usually, when we judge whether the external image of a character constitutes a portrait, we should look at it in combination with its shape and position.

First of all, characters should have portrait characteristics. First, its manifestation is to reflect the image of a specific citizen through photography; Second, the portrait must also reflect the main characteristics of a specific citizen, such as posture, appearance, expression, etc. Third, the portrait must be true and controversial, and celebrities can know whose portrait it is at a glance.

Secondly, it must be the fact of a concrete portrait of a citizen. In the picture, the citizen portrait should occupy a prominent position in the whole image and be represented as a specific object, not as a foil; At the same time, the purpose is not to achieve the goal through the use of portraits.

2. Portrait has the property of things.

Portrait is an artistic representation, which should be fixed on a specific material carrier (such as photographic paper, TV screen, newspapers and magazines, etc.). ) specifically and independently. It is an objective visual image derived from and independent of the portrait owner, which can be dominated, controlled and disposed of by people and has certain property interests.

3. Portrait is the object of portrait right, which shows the unique personality interests of natural persons.

The so-called "property interests" do not come from the physical characteristics of natural persons themselves, but from the personality interests generated by portraits, which reflect different needs of personality interests. The legal protection of natural person's portrait right is actually the need to protect personality interests.

The so-called "portrait right" is a kind of personality right exclusive to natural persons. The legal significance is: the inviolable exclusive right of natural persons to copy their images (portraits) on objective material carriers through plastic arts or other forms.

The personal interests of citizens reflected in their portraits are the protection objects of portrait rights in our laws. It includes spiritual interests and property interests based on the personality interests embodied in portraits.

Characterized in that:

1. The subject of portrait right can only be a natural person. Only natural people have the right to portrait and the right to portrait. Legal persons or other social organizations do not have the right to portrait because there is no objective "portrait" that can independently reflect their appearance. The "corporate image" of a legal person does not refer to a person's portrait, but refers to the comprehensive situation and social evaluation of the legal person's operation, scale, management, benefit, reputation and product quality. )

2. Portrait right also has a kind of property interest, which is derived from the personality interest of the portrait right holder. It allows the portrait owner to transfer the portrait right to a certain extent, and allows others to make and use their own portraits, and get the due use value from them.

3. Portrait right is also a marked personality right, which is grassroots. The basic function is to identify personality by appearance and image, so as to identify every specific natural person. (And the right to name is to identify personality through written symbols).

The content of portrait right:

1, exclusive right of portrait production

As far as photography is concerned, it is the whole process of fixing the appearance image of a natural person on film, photographic paper or other material carriers through photography and transforming the image of a natural person into a portrait.

The exclusive right to make portraits includes: first, the portrait owner can decide to make his own portrait or let others make his own portrait according to his own needs or the needs of others and society, and no one can interfere; Second, the portrait owner has the right to prohibit others from making their own portraits without their consent or authorization. Illegally making portraits of others constitutes infringement.

When we understand the "portrait right", we often think that as long as the portrait of the portrait owner is not open, it does not constitute infringement, which is a misunderstanding of the law. Strictly speaking, it should be understood that whether the exclusive right to make portraits is infringing depends on whether the producer has obtained the permission of the portrait owner when making them. If it is produced without permission-even for the purpose of possession, it will not infringe on the direct interests of the portrait holder, so it also constitutes an infringement of the exclusive right to portrait production. As far as the photographer is concerned, as long as you aim the camera at a natural person to take a portrait, if the portrait owner disagrees, it is infringement.

2. The exclusive right to use the portrait right

Once a portrait is fixed on a material carrier, it is independent of the world and can be dominated and used by people. Although the use value of portrait is of universal significance, only the owner of portrait can enjoy its exclusive right. Its basic content is:

First, natural persons have the right to use their portraits in any way, and obtain spiritual satisfaction and property benefits through their use, and others shall not interfere (but shall not violate the law and public order and good customs). Second, natural persons have the right to allow others to use their portraits and decide to get paid for them (this requires equal consultation with the users and signing a portrait use contract). Third, natural persons have the right to prohibit others from illegally using their portraits.

3. The right to protect the interests of portraits

Portrait interests are the exclusive personal interests of citizens, and no one else may interfere or infringe upon them. The contents are as follows: first, citizens have the right to prohibit others from making their own portraits without their permission; Second, citizens have the right to prohibit others from using their portraits without permission; Third, citizens have the right to forbid others to damage, defile, vilify or distort their portraits.

The general principles are: the right of citizens to copy their own image-the right to agree or disagree to copy their own image in objective material media and space; Citizens have the right to use their own portraits, to allow others to use their own portraits, and to prohibit others from using their own portraits.

Civil Liability for Infringement of Portrait Rights

There are certain principles to determine that the right to portrait has been violated. According to China's General Principles of Civil Law, as long as these three requirements are met, civil liability that constitutes infringement of portrait rights can be identified: First, the occurrence of damage facts. Rube

Civil Liability for Infringement of Portrait Rights

There are certain principles to determine that the right to portrait has been violated. According to China's General Principles of Civil Law, as long as these three requirements are met, civil liability that constitutes infringement of portrait rights can be identified: First, the occurrence of damage facts. For example, after the victim's portrait right is infringed, the victim's reputation, status and identity are hit, which brings mental pain, mainly reflected in the fact that the possibility of the portrait owner obtaining property benefits from his portrait is reduced, including direct losses and indirect losses, including mental damage and material damage. 2. The infringer is subjectively at fault (including intention and negligence). That is, if there are acts prohibited by laws and regulations in photography activities and illegally infringe on the portrait rights of others, it can be considered that there is a fault. 3. There is a causal relationship between the damage facts and the tort. This causal relationship must be an inherent, essential and inevitable connection between the photographer's behavior and the damage result.

Strictly speaking, in photography activities, as long as there is one of the following circumstances, it can be considered as infringement of the portrait rights of others.

1. The act of using the portrait right without the consent of the portrait right holder and without hindrance.

The act of using a portrait without the consent of the portrait owner is also called "improper use of another person's portrait". The legal provisions on the right of portrait in China's civil law are basically aimed at "improper use" of the right of portrait. This improper use can be divided into "for profit" and "for non-profit" illegal use. We can't think that as long as it's not for profit, or with the consent of the portrait owner, we can use the portrait of a citizen at will without making a profit. This understanding is one-sided. Article 100 of China's General Principles of Civil Law stipulates: "Citizens have the right to portrait, and their portraits shall not be used for profit without their consent." The Supreme People's Court's "About Implementation"

In the non-profit use of other people's portraits without their consent, only the behavior with the reason to stop the infringement is legal. Such as news reports, "wanted orders" issued by public security organs to arrest criminal suspects, and so on.

Portrait right, like name right, is an exclusive right. The possession, use and disposal of personal portraits can only be owned by citizens themselves, and no one else can enjoy them without their consent. The act of infringing on the right of portrait is not to use the portrait of a citizen for profit, but to disrespect the exclusive right of a citizen to his portrait. Therefore, for whatever purpose, reproduction, dissemination, exhibition, etc. Citizens' right to portrait should be recognized by citizens, otherwise it will constitute an infringement of the right to portrait.

2. Making portraits of others without authorization (including having photos of others). The act of creating and possessing portraits (photos) of others without my consent. For a photographer, it is the act of taking pictures of others.

Portrait is the external expression of citizen's "personality", and only I have the right to decide whether to reproduce my image. Whether portrait works are made (filmed) for public publication or possession does not affect the composition of infringement of portrait rights. In other words, although it is not used publicly, it also constitutes infringement, such as the photo studio printing the customer's photos privately for preservation.

Third, maliciously insult and vilify the portraits of others. That is, the actor maliciously insults, vilifies, defiles, damages or destroys the integrity of other people's portraits. Including altering, distorting, burning, tearing up or hanging upside down other people's photos, this kind of behavior not only constitutes an infringement of the right of portrait, but also often constitutes an infringement of the right of reputation.

Since you have no malice subjectively, and it is not for profit, it does not constitute economic loss to the other party, but only slight mental damage, not very serious.