Last year I bought a piece of software which allows me to choose two photos and set the software to "morph" one into the other in a series of small steps. I need to plant "anchor points" at each spot on Photo A which is meant to gradually be transformed into the matching spot on Photo B. If I take, for instance, two digital photos of beautiful women seen from about the same angle, and click to set up pairs of corresponding "anchor points" between the two pictures, I can create a video that seems to show one person's face gradually changing into another's.
After I had just bought the software, I spent a lot of time playing with it, creating transformations of one face to another.
What I'm wondering is: If I stop the video in the middle of the morphing process, and save that frame as a digital "photo" of its own, is the result a "derivative work" which simultaneously falls under the umbrella of the copyright on Photo A and the copyright on Photo B? Or, since the current face on the screen is not blatantly a near-copy of A or B, could it qualify as an "original work" on which I can claim copyright ownership myself?
A follow-up question: Suppose I have a "morphed photo" which blends Faces A and B, and another "morphed photo" which blends Faces C and D (from four separate digital images, each presumably owned by a different person or corporation), and then suppose I use the morphing software once again to take those two images and create a new image of a woman's face which might be called "a projection of what a girl would grow up to look like if genes from all four of those real women had been spliced together in a test tube." At this point, the image on my screen has only faint traces of a resemblance to any one of the four models. Is it a "derivative" or "original" work? Could I distribute copies of it without violating anyone else's intellectual property rights?
After I had just bought the software, I spent a lot of time playing with it, creating transformations of one face to another.
What I'm wondering is: If I stop the video in the middle of the morphing process, and save that frame as a digital "photo" of its own, is the result a "derivative work" which simultaneously falls under the umbrella of the copyright on Photo A and the copyright on Photo B? Or, since the current face on the screen is not blatantly a near-copy of A or B, could it qualify as an "original work" on which I can claim copyright ownership myself?
A follow-up question: Suppose I have a "morphed photo" which blends Faces A and B, and another "morphed photo" which blends Faces C and D (from four separate digital images, each presumably owned by a different person or corporation), and then suppose I use the morphing software once again to take those two images and create a new image of a woman's face which might be called "a projection of what a girl would grow up to look like if genes from all four of those real women had been spliced together in a test tube." At this point, the image on my screen has only faint traces of a resemblance to any one of the four models. Is it a "derivative" or "original" work? Could I distribute copies of it without violating anyone else's intellectual property rights?