A French surgeon tried to sell Bataclan victim's X-ray as an NFT

midian182

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WTF?! In addition to the damage that NFTs do to the environment and the negative implications of adding them to games, the actual content of non-fungible tokens can also be questionable, to say the least. A French surgeon, for example, is now facing legal and potential disciplinary action for attempting to sell an NFT of an X-ray taken from one of the concert attendees shot during the 2015 terrorist attack on the Bataclan in Paris.

Orthopedic surgeon Emmanuel Masmejean, who works at Paris’ Georges Pompidou public hospital, was reportedly selling the X-ray in NFT form without the patient’s consent on OpenSea, writes the Mediapart website.

The digitized X-ray shows a Kalashnikov bullet lodged in the forearm of one of the people shot during the Paris attacks in November 2015, when attackers killed 130 people, including 90 in the Bataclan theater. The NFT was on sale for 2,446 Euros (around $2,768) but has now been removed.

Martin Hirsch, the head of Paris' public hospitals, tweeted that the surgeon would face criminal and professional complaints over his "disgraceful" and "scandalous" actions. "This act is contrary to sound professional practice, puts medical secrecy in danger, and goes against the values of AP-HP (Paris hospitals) and public service," Hirsch wrote in a statement to staff, which he shared on Twitter.

Masmejean told the publication that putting the NFT up for sale was “an error” and that he regretted not securing permission from the patient, described as a young woman whose boyfriend was killed during the attack.

The content of NFTs has been under the spotlight recently. Last week brought reports of sellers trying to make money from stolen images of influencers and YouTube gamers, as well as pictures of popular internet personalities photoshopped onto porn magazines.

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NFT is just a way to scam rich people that have way too much money and do not know what do with it.
I wonder if that's true. My gut continues to be that it's mostly about money laundering. I see lots of stories about alleged NFT sales & prices, yet I do not know anyone or have heard of anyone who is talking proudly about a purchase they made for themselves.
 
The copyright does not belong to the person(s) in the image belong to the entity that owns the equipment used to capture the image. So the copyright of the image is the intellectual property of the hospital to which the X-ray machine belongs.

So if someone want to use it legally has to be in contact with the ceo of the hospital who if he want to be legal too has to ask the board for the permission (too many work-hours). So it more easy to say it’s fair use because we use it to criticize how “bad or good” the attackers are or how “bad or good” the nfts are.
 
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