A Webcam Company Is Demanding Payment From an Artist Who Used Screenshots From Its Feeds to Document Italy’s Deserted Streets

When the world went on lockdown, Milan Radisic, an aerial
photographer who has shot in 250 locations across Europe, found
himself at home in Turkey, trapped indoors like many other people
around the world.

To keep himself occupied, he undertook a project publishing
images of once-bustling Italian tourist destinations such as St.
Mark’s Square in Venice, now eerily devoid of people.

Because he could not travel, he took his pictures from publicly
accessible webcam feeds maintained by SkylineWebcams. After
converting them to grayscale, he posted the pictures on
his Behance profile and on
Bored Panda.

That’s when SkylineWebcams came knocking, accusing Radisic
of using their pictures without authorization.

“Please proceed in removing the content as soon as possible,” a
company representative wrote to Radisic in an email obtained by
Artnet News. The other option was to license the images for
€2,100.

“I was shocked,” Radisic recalled. He says he already paid to
access the images by signing up for the company’s premium
service for €2.95 ($3.20) a month.

Venice – St Mark’s Square Two soldiers and policeman crossing empty St. Mark’s Square of Venice. Italy, March 25, 2020. Photo by Milan Radisic via SkylineWebcams.

Venice – St Mark’s Square. Photo by
Milan Radisic via SkylineWebcams.

“At that moment, it was so important to share with the world
what happened in Italy,” he added. Stressing that he wasn’t making
any money from the project, he asked the representative to approve
his use of the images for free.

But the representative denied the request, and
warned Radisic that unless the photos were removed, “you will
most likely be contacted by our legal department.” When Radisic
subsequently offered €200 ($215), he was again
rebuffed. “I am sympathetic, unfortunately there isn’t much
that I can do,” the company representative wrote. “I’m tied by
company policy.”

Representatives from SkylineWebcams did not respond to
Artnet News’s request for comment.

Radisic took the photos down at first, but he has since made
them available again. Now he’s planning on turning all 40 into a
giant collage to be auctioned off to benefit a hospital in Bergamo,
the city at the center of Italy’s outbreak

“To be honest, from the business side, this series was a huge
promotion for the webcam provider,” he told Artnet News, joking
that “they might even have to pay for the collaboration.”

See more images from Radisic’s series below.

Padua – Sant’Antonio Basilica Cameraman covered with protective gear approaching his camera before the start of evening coronavirus invocation at 6 pm. At basilica of Sant’Antonio, priests pray in an empty sanctuary, the sermon is broadcast by Italian TV. Padua, March 30. 2020. Photo by Milan Radisic via SkylineWebcams.

Padua – Sant’Antonio Basilica.Photo by
Milan Radisic via SkylineWebcams.

Rome – Navona Square. Photographer taking symmetric picture of Fiumi Fountain of empty Navona Square, Rome. March 26, 2020. Photo by Milan Radisic via SkylineWebcams.

Rome – Navona Square. Photo by Milan
Radisic via SkylineWebcams.

Rome – Trevi Fountain. A policeman with protective face mask guides one person in the front of Trevi Fountain, Rome. March 25, 2020. Photo by Milan Radisic via SkylineWebcams.

Rome – Trevi Fountain. Photo by Milan
Radisic via SkylineWebcams.

Rome - Pantheon Two police cars blinking in the front of Pantheon. Rome, March 25. 2020. Photo by Milan Radisic via SkylineWebcams.

Rome – Pantheon. Photo by Milan Radisic
via SkylineWebcams.

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