Cows in brush along the North Platte River at the working cattle-ranch operation at Park Range Ranch, adjacent to its guest ranch for hunters, fishers, and other friends of the owner in Jackson County, Colorado's, North Park

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Cows in brush along the North Platte River at the working cattle-ranch operation at Park Range Ranch, adjacent to its guest ranch for hunters, fishers, and other friends of the owner in Jackson County, Colorado's, North Park

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The lodge and a ring of guest cabins adjacent to the working cattle-ranch portion of the operation, are part of what the ranch calls "Fort Boettcher." It isn't and was never a fort, though it looks like a modern version of a frontier outpost. "Boettcher," pronounced BETT-chur, was Charles Boettcher, a wealthy Leadville and Denver, Colorado, businessman who built the cabins as a fishing and hunting camp for his friends and raised draft horses in the pastures for the Denver tram system in the early 20th Century. Coloradans in this remote part of the state, near the Wyoming line, call their valleys "parks."
Credit line: Gates Frontiers Fund Colorado Collection within the Carol M. Highsmith Archive, Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division.
Gift; Gates Frontiers Fund; 2015; (DLC/PP-2015:068).
Forms part of: Gates Frontiers Fund Colorado Collection within the Carol M. Highsmith Archive.

In 2015, documentary photographer Carol Highsmith received a letter from Getty Images accusing her of copyright infringement for featuring one of her own photographs on her own website. It demanded payment of $120. This was how Highsmith came to learn that stock photo agencies Getty and Alamy had been sending similar threat letters and charging fees to users of her images, which she had donated to the Library of Congress for use by the general public at no charge. In 2016, Highsmith has filed a $1 billion copyright infringement suit against both Alamy and Getty stating “gross misuse” of 18,755 of her photographs. “The defendants [Getty Images] have apparently misappropriated Ms. Highsmith’s generous gift to the American people,” the complaint reads. “[They] are not only unlawfully charging licensing fees … but are falsely and fraudulently holding themselves out as the exclusive copyright owner.” According to the lawsuit, Getty and Alamy, on their websites, have been selling licenses for thousands of Highsmith’s photographs, many without her name attached to them and stamped with “false watermarks.” (more: http://hyperallergic.com/314079/photographer-files-1-billion-suit-against-getty-for-licensing-her-public-domain-images/)

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01/01/2016
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colorado
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Library of Congress
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