To be or not to be … photoshopped
by Yann Basire and Caroline Le Goffic
Photoshopping has become commonplace
in fashion advertising. In most cases, models’ bodies are slimmed by using
image-editing software. Such practices promoting unrealistic representations of
women’s bodies are known to play a role in the development of eating disorders.
In the Law 2016-41 on the modernization of the
French health system of 26 January 2016, the French legislator
tackled this public health issue by including a provision (codified as Article
L. 2133-2 of the Public Health Code) whereby fashion photos must bear a
notification if they have been digitally altered to make a model's silhouette
"narrower or wider”. The goal is to raise consumers’ awareness about the
dangers of extreme thinness.
This provision was subject to its
implementation by a Government decree, which came on 4 May 2017. Decree 2017-738 of 4 May 2017
pertaining to photographs used for commercial purposes of models whose physical appearance has been modified (codified
in articles R. 2133-4, -5 and -6 of the Public Health Code) specifies in fact the scope of the rule.
The system came
into force on 1 October 2017.
Pursuant to Article L. 2133-2 of the Public Health Code, “photographs used
for commercial purposes of models, as defined by Article L. 7123-2 of the
Employment Law Code, whose physical appearance
has been modified through the use of image processing software to slim down or
flesh out the model's silhouette must bear the notice: 'Retouched
Photograph.'" The Employment Law Code defines models broadly as all
persons who, even occasionally, either present a product or a service to the
public while reproducing their image on any visual or audiovisual support, or
pose as a model, whether or not their image is later used.
The Decree
specifies when photographs of models may be deemed to be used “for commercial
purposes”. Article R. 2133-4 of the Public Health Code provides
that the rule applies to “photographs used in advertising messages”, which
means that photographs used in articles are excluded from the scope of the obligation.
Thus, only photographs used following the purchase of advertising space are
concerned.
Article R. 2133-4 of the Public Health Code further
specifies that the obligation applies no matter what medium the photograph used
for commercial purposes is affixed on: billboards, press publications or online
publications.
Regarding the content of the notice itself, Article R. 2133-5 sets out that “the notice must be affixed in a manner
that is accessible, easily readable and clearly distinct from the advertising or
promotional message. The presentation of the notice will be governed
by rules and conventions of good practice defined by the industry, and
notably by the French advertising regulation authority”.
Then, Article R. 2133-6 of the Public Health Code lays the
obligation to mention the notice on advertisers who “shall ensure that the
legal obligations found under Articles L. 2333-2, R. 2133-4 and R. 2133-5
of the Code are respected. To this end, they must ascertain whether the
photographs used for commercial purposes which they purchase, directly or via
third parties, were or were not retouched using image processing software with
a view to slim down or flesh out the model's silhouette”.
Failure to comply with such
obligations results, according to Article L. 2133-2, in a €37,500 fine which
can be brought up to 30% of the expenses devoted to the advert.
The implementation of these new provisions raises several questions from
a practical standpoint, which we address in our contribution for JIPLP: stay
tuned!
[This is an Authors' Take post, which provides readers with an insight into current IP scholarship, featuring preliminary comments and thoughts from authors of articles accepted for publication in forthcoming issues of the Journal of Intellectual Property Law & Practice (OUP).]
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