It's Fun to Know: Copyrighting Your Elvis Sighting
Government bureaucrats are nothing if not thorough. Case in point: There's an entry on the FAQ page of the United States Copyright Office that deals with the question of copyrighting your Elvis sighting.
Turns out you can't do it, because copyright law doesn't protect sightings or the subjects of photographs. But you can copyright your photo of an incognito Elvis for a small fee.
No word yet from the copyright office about copyrighting your Bigfoot sightings.
Re: Photos
Posted: Fri Mar 27, 2009 9:10 am
by LenaHuat
Saw some water babies at Plaza Singapura mall too but this takes the cake and puts a really big smile on my face:-
Re: Photos
Posted: Sat Mar 28, 2009 5:41 pm
by blid2def
Haha nice shot!
Re: Photos
Posted: Sat Mar 28, 2009 5:41 pm
by blid2def
And now for something that defines awesomeness...
Tilt-shifted, time-lapse photography (p.s. everything in the movie is real... they are not toys or figurines...):
You're in Paris, snapping a series of pictures as the sun sets behind the Eiffel Tower.
You're sure you must have captured the perfect image... until you check and notice an "intruder" in every shot: a fellow tourist, the rear wheel of a passing bicycle, a stray bit of debris in the foreground.
And that's when you break out a new Web application called Tourist Remover. The software removes any unwelcome objects by combining the "clean" parts of multiple photos of the same scene into a composite.