Japan's supreme court rules that people who retweet copyrighted photos are guilty of infringement

In 2014 a photographer noticed that one of his photos had been posted to Twitter without his permission. The photo was retweeted by three other people, and Twitter's algorithm cropped out the name of the photographer. The photographer went to court to get the name of the original poster, as well as the 3 people who retweeted the photo. The case ended up in the Supreme Court, which ruled in favor of the photographer.

From The Next Web:

As a result, the High Court ordered Twitter to divulge the email addresses of both the original poster and the retweeters. That ruling didn't sit right with Twitter, which appealed the decision, claiming its users had no control over the cropping algorithm. The argument didn't fly in court, though.

Four out of the five judges involved in yesterday's decision sided with the photographer. The dissenting judge argued that ruling in favor of the photographer would put the responsibility of complying with image copyrights on the users, which obviously opens a whole new can of worms.

It's unclear what the photographer plans to do with the users' information, but considering his zeal for legal battles, it won't be surprising if he follows action against them. The worst bit? The ruling puts Japan's 45 million residents at legal risk for innocuously reposting images.