Jerry A. Greenberg is the Co-Chairman and Co-Chief Executive Officer of Sapient, a business consulting and technology services firm headquartered at Cambridge, MA. He, along with Stuart Moore, founded Sapient in 1991. A chairman is the presiding officer of a meeting, organization, committee, or other deliberative body. ... CEO and corporate governance Main article: corporate governance Although it is possible to have more than one CEO in a company, generally the job is not shared. ... Sapience is the ability of an organism or entity to act with intelligence. ... Harvard Square, May 2000 Cambridge is a city in the greater Boston area in Massachusetts, United States. ... 1991 is a common year starting on Tuesday of the Gregorian calendar. ...
Jerry has a degree in Economics from Harvard University. Economics (deriving from the Greek words Î¿Î¯ÎºÏ [okos], house, and νÎÎ¼Ï [nemo], rules hence household management) is the social science that studies the allocation of scarce resources to satisfy unlimited wants. ... Harvard University is a private university in Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA, and a member of the Ivy League. ...
Greenberg received compensation consisting of a daily fee, a fee based on the number of photographs published, and payment of expenses, and in return the Society acquired all rights in any photograph taken on the jobs that was ultimately selected for publication in the Magazine.
Greenberg's fourth hire for the Society appeared in the July 1990 issue of the Magazine, but the agreement for this job was more detailed than its predecessors.
We conclude that the unauthorized use of the Greenberg photographs in the CNG compiled and authored by the Society constitutes copyright infringement that is not excused by the privilege afforded the Society under § 201(c).
Greenberg also deserves thanks from all photographers for having the determination to keep going with this case in spite of all that it has cost him in terms of money, time and energy.
Greenberg contended that the CD-Rom was a new work that contained substantial elements in addition to the republication of Geographic's monthly magazine.
The appeals court also ruled that Greenberg was entitled to damages, court costs and attorney's fees, which were to be determined by the same lower court that had first rejected his claims.