In 2011, when British photographer David J. slater was visiting a park in Indonesia, his camera was taken away by a group of black monkeys. The resu1t was hundreds of monkey selfies(自拍照).The best ones show a monkey smiling toothily for the camera
Nobody knew they would create a copyright(版权) battle three years later.
Last month, a website put the monkey se1f1es online under a collection of free photos without Slater’s permission(允许).
However, the website refused to do so. They said that according to US copyright law, whoever pushes the button on the camera owns the copyright to the photo.
They Said, “US copyright law says that works that come from a non-human source can’t ask for copyright. That means monkeys don’t own copyright”.
A.It was the monkeys but not Slater that pushed the button. |
B.As of now, there has been no result in the Monkey Selfie case. |
C.Slater then sold the photos and they became popular on the Internet |
D.Slater asked the website to take them down since he owns the copyright |
E.Slater argues that the pictures belong to him as they were taken from his camera. |

同类型试题

y = sin x, x∈R, y∈[–1,1],周期为2π,函数图像以 x = (π/2) + kπ 为对称轴
y = arcsin x, x∈[–1,1], y∈[–π/2,π/2]
sin x = 0 ←→ arcsin x = 0
sin x = 1/2 ←→ arcsin x = π/6
sin x = √2/2 ←→ arcsin x = π/4
sin x = 1 ←→ arcsin x = π/2


y = sin x, x∈R, y∈[–1,1],周期为2π,函数图像以 x = (π/2) + kπ 为对称轴
y = arcsin x, x∈[–1,1], y∈[–π/2,π/2]
sin x = 0 ←→ arcsin x = 0
sin x = 1/2 ←→ arcsin x = π/6
sin x = √2/2 ←→ arcsin x = π/4
sin x = 1 ←→ arcsin x = π/2

