DoryLvr":6ww3jy94 said:
Seems to me that if you credit the source of the picture and you aren't making money off the post, than you are no different than a student writing a paper and footnoting copyrighted material. Most newspapers have a part on their website that says what constitute authorized use of their material.
If you post someone else's picture and you are making money off your website, that is a different story.
It is less about making money and more about maintaining control of one's property; in this case: an image. If you take someone's image without authorization, the creator of that image no longer has control on how that image is being used. We dealt with this on a daily basis during my 30+ year career as a professional photographer. The world has changed - it is easy to "grab" an image and many people do it. People made the same argument with people trading "free" music on Napster... and a lot of people getting "free" music were successfully sued by the music publishing industry. It is theft of intellectual property.
Allow me to bring this to a boating situation. Your boat is sitting out at anchor. People can admire how pretty your boat is, sitting out there in all its beautiful glory. You get in your dinghy and head out to your boat. When you get there, you find 3 guys fishing in the cockpit your boat, two kids wresting out on the bow, and granny sitting on top, sunning herself.
Would you tell these people to get off your boat?
What if their response were: "Hey, it was out here for everyone to enjoy, so we are enjoying it. We didn't make any money off this, so it's OK. Besides, look at the other boats at anchor - all our cousins and their friends are sitting on all those boats, too... everybody's doing it, so it must be OK!"
The solution is simple (your parents taught you this when you were a kid): if it ain't yours, don't take it.
Don't blame the lawyers. Making money from people who want/need legal representation is what they do for a living. What they're doing is not illegal; what the person who took the image without permission did
is illegal. It's not the same as a kid footnoting a source... oh, and the reason you were taught to footnote when you were a kid was to teach you that you can't just "take" someone else's writing (also intellectual property). You are NOT entitled to copy someone's entire book and put a footnote at the end of it, and then call it your work. Or reproduce it in any manner without the permission of the author/publisher.
Some may recall that "grabbing" others' images and reposting them has been discussed here in the past. I may have made mention that someone would be brought to task over it, and certainly stated that it isn't right... or legal. So, this is the next step. "Take" something that doesn't belong to you, and you may get to meet these lawyers. That doesn't make them (the lawyers) the bad guys in this scenerio.
In conclusion, Your Honor and members of the jury, allow me to point out the above words that are bold and italicized. We rest our case.
Jim B.
PS I talked to Bubba and his friends who were on your boat... they said, "Tell that Mister C-Dory guy that we're giving him 'credit' - we told all our friends, cousins, and neighbors how nice it is to sit out on his boat. They can't wait to do it, too!"
:roll:
On more than one occasion when we had caught copyright infringers, their defense was, "You're just a money grubber." Interestingly enough, I never asked any of them for money (although there was generally a discussion of what the fines would be) - I simply didn't want someone taking my intellectual property and perhaps using it in a way that could be injurious to my reputation. If you recall the discussion about Triton making brochures for owners to hand out to interested folks, someone brought up the idea of printing it on their home inkjet printer. That made me cringe. Something printed on a home printer may be gawd-awful color and image quality... NOT what any company wants to project as their image. While any "taking" of property may be a monetary lost for the owner of that property, it is hard to put a price on one's reputation and the representation of their work... "giving the photographer credit" when the image is badly reproduced is the last thing a professional wants. This isn't Nike - just DON'T do it.