07/08/2014 18:40
Photographer 'lost £10,000' in Wikipedia monkey 'selfie' row
A photographer involved in a copyright row with Wikipedia over a monkey "selfie" says he has lost £10,000 in income over two years because of it, the BBC reported.
David Slater, from Coleford in the Forest of Dean, said the web-based encyclopaedia had repeatedly refused to remove the image from its site.
He said there had been no interest from anyone in buying the image since it was declared to be in the "public domain."
The site said Mr Slater did not own the copyright as he did not take the photo.
Mr Slater told BBC News he relied on the income from his photographs to make his living.
"I made £2,000 [for that picture] in the first year after it was taken. After it went on Wikipedia all interest in buying it went.
"It's hard to put a figure on it but I reckon I've lost £10,000 or more in income. It's killing my business."
Mr Slater said he spent three days in Indonesia shadowing the monkeys in 2011.
The debate about the picture resurfaced on Wednesday as the Wikipedia Foundation published its first transparency report - following a similar practice by Google, Twitter and others.
Later the page containing the image had been "nominated for deletion" on the grounds it is "copyright David Slater", and "Wikimedia is displaying it unlawfully."