Technically, one could very easily argue this is illegal as you're
reproducing copies of the images without permission. Obviously, this sort
of thing is very standard on a lot of the internet, and most people know
the risks of putting their photos up online. But there are also copyright
trolls out there who love sending companies demand letters over small,
accidental infringements.

It's theoretically possible for companies distributing Debian to be sued
for contributory infringement in a case like this. Very unlikely, but
*possible*. Especially if the program downloads the same images for all
users, because then I can know for sure that some huge swath of Debian
users have downloaded my photo. The program also creates an easily
discoverable directory of evidence, which might make things worse if a
lawsuit ever gets going.

Would you be able to write a version that only downloads images with a
known license on a certain list of good licenses, or images known to be in
the public domain?

On Sun, Oct 9, 2022, 07:33 Patrice Coni <patrice.coni-...@yandex.com> wrote:

> Dear debian-legal people,
>
> I develop a software that downloads the daily picture from Bing or
> Windows Spotlight and set it as wallpaper on a X11 desktop environment.
> Bing or Windows Spotlight are features of Microsoft.
> The daily picture is obtained from www.bing.com or from arc.msn.com.
> Each image appears to be copyrighted by its owner.
>
> The software (DailyDesktopWallpaperPlus) not only downloads the picture,
> but the copyright and description of each image is stored in a local
> database.
> The images are saved and can be reused later.
> Is this legal? What do I have to consider?
>
> My goal is that the software to be included by Debian.
>
> Link: https://github.com/pgc062020/DailyDesktopWallpaperPlus
>
> Thanks in advance.
>
> Best regards
>
> Patrice Coni
>
>

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