Today, courts still see the foundation for a photograph s copyright - the originality in the photograph - in roughly similar terms: in the photographer s selection of background, lights, shading, positioning of subject, and timing or posing the subjects, lighting, angle, selection of film and camera, evoking the desired expression, and almost any other variant involved. However, the choice of the image frame produces selection in the copyright sense. Once the frame is chosen, there is another set of choices made by the photographer regarding the position of the subject, angle and timing. The need for incentives, our concern for fairness and our sense of beauty may tend to make us look at the copyrightability of photographs generously. Many more would be interested in their rights if they knew how their images were being used. The protection of photographers is copyright education. Extensive reformation is needed at both the governmental level and in the minds of creators and corporations such as Facebook, Google, etc. The first person who spend the enormous labor and time to find and shoot the object and place for the first time should be legally protected generously. However, when the latter is recorded in the same landscape, at least the latter would highlight their creativity to be expressed distinguishably from the first photographer. Copyright legislation moves slowly and educating the populace to take action to preserve their rights can be a daunting task. There are no easy answers to balancing copyright protection for creators and access for the public, but the answer is never copyright infringement. Copyright law must seek to craft a system that is strong enough to provide protection to the least among us, but sufficiently flexible to evolve with the times and technological advancements.