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Can a DAM handle Rights Managed assets?

Posted byHenrik de Gyoron February 9, 2009

Many organizations licenseRights Managed(RM) assets such as photographs from vendor likeCorbisorGetty Images. Many organizations don’t manage these licensed assets well nor keep track of when they expire.

TheStock Artist Alliance(SAA) reported“…nine out of every ten images [were] unauthorized uses.”

Many of these ‘unauthorized uses’ involve Rights Managed assets.

This is a legal liability for many businesses and there is very little done about this issue today. There is little awareness about this issue and the widespread education about Rights Management isabysmal. There are a handful of associations who try, but have such as limited audience and even less people listening to what they have say.

Digital Rights Management (DRM) solutions try, but do not resolve these issues. Why? Rights Management is about knowing:

DRM attempts to do this by simply trying tolimitthe use of the asset.

There are so many ways DRM often fails to work. For starters, DRM technology rarely remains intact when an asset is copied, renamed or reformatted. Creators of content such as movies, music and photographs are the most common victims to suffer from this type of theft and result in huge losses in sales.This is because DRM technologies are fighting an almost fruitless battle. The money it costs to pursue offenders must vastly out weight the possible royalties and money to be regained in a suit.

Giulio Prisco, chief executive of Metafuturing Second Life, formerly of CERN said“You cannot stop a tide with a spoon. Cracking technology will always be several steps ahead of DRM and content will be redistributed on anonymous networks.”

Very few DRM track the use of the assets. A few technologies track the illegal uses of the assetsafter the factand report this back to the content owners. Then again, do the owners of the content and licensors evenknow where these assets are supposed to appear? Good record keeping on all sides is part of the key here.

Rights Management can be quite complex. Many people simply do not understand rights management. Anyone ordering rights managed assets from a vendor mustunderstand licensing and copyright. Otherwise, this is a liability to the organization and ignorance is not an excuse.

Rights Managed (RM) assets are negioated and licensed,not purchased, with finite terms which may include :

Can a DAM handle Rights Managed assets? This is far more than an issue of storing Rights Managed assets in a DAM and associating some metadata which state the terms of the asset. Most Rights Managed assets can not even be archived if they are not currently licensed. A few vendors don’t even want you to archive the asset at all, so check with the vendor/licensor directly. If you have Rights Managed assets, what system do you have in place which will:

This is part of good record keeping.

What if you have multiple licenses for the same asset used different ways? This is getting complex isn’t. A highly DAM customization could do this for your organization. Or you could haveanother systemto handle just the licensingseparate from the assetsthemselves. I would recommend one centralized system instead of separate systems do each task which can be even more costly and time consuming.

It is possible to store licensed Rights Managed (RM) assets in a DAM, but major customizations are often required.

In order to use a DAM for this, it would need to track every use of every RM asset ordered out of the DAM. If an asset can be ordered from the DAM, it can be tracked by the DAM with a record of what has been used where. Some DAMs can apply licensing information into the embedded metadata. There are a few DAM systems which can even apply DRM to an outbound asset (we talked about DRM though). The idea is the DAM order must include how and where the asset will be used. The DAM can act as a central repository for all assets as well as the rights management information. This information can be relayed to the vendor for the proper licensing each and every time. There are workflows to accomplish this.

The good news is that in the past years, more of the market has become Royalty Free and DRM-free. That does not directly affect what you have licensed to date though. Much of historic content that is not public domain hangs on to the Rights Managed model of doing business. After all , it is bit hard to recreate history after it happened.

So how is your organization handling the licenses of Rights Managed assets today?

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