Hoping some other's have opinions about this...I'm at a loss.
Backstory:
Wife works for a non-profit. She's in charge of all incoming and outgoing media relations. A few months ago she set up a video shoot with a local baker to film her making some of her original recipes in conjunction with my wife's employer. The video would then be hosted on the non-profit's blog, with links to the recipes and credit to the original baker. The whole video was done without compensation to the original baker. The only fees paid were fees to the producer of the shoot.
Now, the baker agreed to the shoot. She agreed to do it pro-bono. But the baker refuses to allow the non-profit to post the original recipes on the blog, claiming it violates her intellectual property. Which is fair. The baker came up with the recipes on her own. However, my wife's employer is not claiming ownership over the recipes, and they are agreeing to link back to the baker's company for all credit for the recipe. The baker says no dice. She states that by putting the link on the non-profit's blog, it makes it public content and since she was not compensated for the recipe, she doesn't want it on there. I would assume that providing credit (linking to original baker's website or name, stating recipes are not products of "non profit corp" or whatever) would suffice? But I'm not an attorney.
raiderbuck
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raiderbuck
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Mon, Mar 7, 2016 11:08 AM
Mar 7, 2016 11:08 AM
Mar 7, 2016 11:08am