{photo rip off story}

My dear friend Yvonne (thank you so much!) in Germany emailed me tonight with disturbing news: someone on eBay has taken my photo (below) and altered the colors and cropped it and is selling it as a print on wood, as their own work, over at eBay. I take photos of nature, dolls, animals, etc. as a hobby only, not to sell. What do you think of this?
Darling, huh?, originally uploaded by decor8.

Here's the auction, see for yourself. I mean, what is wrong with people you know? If you take photos of Blythe dolls, you may want to check that auction because the person has a lot of other photos there that may or may not have been taken from the web.

(image from holly becker)

Comments

Amanda said…
Some people are so sad Holly! Can you contact ebay regarding the issue, or perhaps message the seller with a not so friendly letter?

Amanda xx

PS. Has the parcel arrived yet?
haus maus said…
What parcel, Amanda? Did you send something along to me? :)
Amanda said…
Oh, I sent the magazine off with your little feature. I sent it Saturday (3rd) and was told it would take 7 - 10 working days.

Hopefully it will be in your PO Box by the end of this week. x
haus maus said…
oh that is SO nice, thank you!! I can't wait to get your package. I'll let you know when it arrives, okay?
Anna @ D16 said…
Okay, that is ridic. Redic AND illegal!!

You've already contacted eBay, right?
Anonymous said…
How did this person get the photo? If it was on flickr, did you reserve rights? I woul at least contact ebay and ask for suggestions. I would also contact the seller-it may be that someone supplies their product and they don't know what's going on.
Linda Merrill said…
I definitely would contact Ebay. Last week, I found a pic in an ad for a flooring company where they photoshopped in their wood floor onto the pic of a hall in a famous castle in France. I actually thought the pic was mine - I'd taken one from the same vantage point and had recently posted it to my blog. After study, I determined it wasn't my photos - just a coincidence - but still, it was wrong of them. If it had been my photo, I would have sent a C&D letter from my attorney to protect my copyright. Plus, I let the castle management know as well.
Anonymous said…
What is interesting is it reads on that page:

LEGAL DISCLAIMER: We are not an authorized reseller, associate, dealer or representative of any of the designers, brands, or manufacturers that are offered in our auctions.
###### said…
What tha (bleep bleep)! I hope you have sent that person a good ole email and notify ebay! That will for sure bring them right on down.
You can report the seller for stealing your photo - eBay should then remove the listing. This is the Report Item link:

http://contact.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ReportItemMember&items=270329162763&seller=babyblue_72
Chef Messy said…
I posted this comment on Decor8 also, but just in case you don't get it, I'm adding it here.

The sad news is that if the photo was on Flickr, you’ve signed your rights away and the photo is now public domain. It’s still skeevy of people to try to make a buck off of it, but it’s not technically illegal. That’s why a lot of people use watermarks. A similar situation, by the way, happened with Virgin Mobile in Australia not that long ago. The company snagged a picture of someone’s vacation photos and used it as a billboard, and the person in the photo (who hadn’t given her permission for the photo to even be posted online) tried to sue, without any luck. I’ve had photos used without permission before, too, and it just stinks.
Lise Johnston said…
Complain to the seller and ebay!
MMW said…
Contact ebay. They can remove items that aren't legally for sale (eg copyright issues, etc.) Here's the link:
http://pages.ebay.com/securitycenter/reportproblem.html

all the best.
nichole said…
i am so sorry! this can be extremely frustrating. can anything be done? please let us know if i can do anything.
Anonymous said…
This is crazy! What is wrong with people?!! Every time I see this happen to someone on the web, I cannot believe it. So sorry it's happening to you.
Rona Chang said…
Not very nice at all. I would contact ebay, they seem to be good at being vigilant.
REPORT THEM! That is what the ebay 'police' is for...
Jenin said…
Hi there!.. That's so sad..
I get so angry when this kind of stuff happens..
It happened to me once.. a girl won an ipod in a magazine contest with a picture she took from my hi5..(with me in the picture!!!)
I was so mad.. and the magazine only said that it was not their problem ..
ARGH ARGH..
well, good luck with that..and happy monday :D
Anonymous said…
I just reported the item to ebay as a violation! That is TERRIBLE!
Unknown said…
I would send him an e-mail telling him to withdraw the auction or else...and if he doesn't notify Ebay. Did you notice that he put a watermark on the pics?
Bye,
Marianne
Anonymous said…
Update! I've heard back from my reporting the incident and Terrell at Ebay said that they are now investigating this item as well as the other items the seller has listed. :) We'll get them!
xoxo
Audrey
Carrie Nicole said…
I would absolutely report this to ebay. Seems it's happening all over. A flickr pal of mine who is a fab photog but only for personal use took a picture of his Westie a couple years back. Then he was in Sam's club over the holidays and the picture was on the packaging of some dog toys from China!! Like, mass produced all over the place! Anyways, haven't heard how it turned out but he said it was sure an interesting conversation with the staff at that store and with their legal department.

Personally, I agree that imitation can be a lovely form of flattery and if someone had loved the photo and printed it out to put on their bulletin board for inspiration that's one thing...but this by no means falls into that category. This is plagiarism pure and simple and then to top it off they are trying to make a buck off of it.

:( wish this hadn't happened to you.
Kelly H. said…
at the bottom of the listing there is a link to report it. seems like you certainly have a good enough reason to do so.

some people are so tacky!
Heidi Jo said…
Wow. That is HORRIBLE!!
Taylor said…
That is just disgusting. Wrong and illegal. Just because a photo is on the internet does not mean it is up for grabs to do what you want with.

I hope that you report them Holly instead of letting it slide.

Good luck to you. I know this is disturbing news to wake up to.
Anonymous said…
that sucks, i hate to see these ebay ripoffs. it happens a lot with free knitting patterns too, i know that you can contact eBay and they will pull the listing, but the seller might just reemerge with the same thing under a different name eventually.
Alex Louisa said…
I hate stories like this. It's all too easy isn't it?

Ha, they're probably getting excited at all the hits they're getting on their auction, when it's only coming from furious people on your blog! At least it doesn't have any bids, and I hope it gets removed!!

I had someone selling images of my artwork on totes. They didn't even bother removing the watermark!!

And yay for friends like Yvonne!
Wow...I think this is totally crappy. I came over from your decor8 link and can't help but comment on this! Have you emailed the seller? I'd be happy to myself.

Blah. Sometimes "the internets" are not so cool. ;-)
Miss Ripley said…
I'm with those that say report the seller to Ebay. That's really upsetting, and I'm sorry your work has been stolen.
cassandra said…
that is HORRIBLE! you should absolutely get them banned from ebay. i can't believe how pathetic some people are... the audacity!!! ohhh... this makes me mad! i hate stealers.
Desiree said…
Gah :( I hope they can do something about that.
I've had photos of mine used inappropriately too (aka sold against my will and such) and I know the feeling.
It's like being cheated :S
I really HATE when people do this, This has happened to me with my ABC Love prints ...someone eas selling them on ETSY. I wrote them & Etsy and finally they removed them. I would email EBAY...you are technically the copyright owner of that photo if you took it. ;)

Jen Ramos
'Cards & Prints You'll Love...'
www.madebygirl.com
madebygirl.blogspot.com
Anonymous said…
"The sad news is that if the photo was on Flickr, you’ve signed your rights away and the photo is now public domain."

No, that's definitely not true. All images on Flickr are 'all rights reserved' by default unless the owner of the account opts to use a creative commons license instead. This still doesn't remove copyright ownership - it just permits various uses of the images - all requiring attribution.

So you definitely have a case to put to Ebay. The person is breaking international copyright right law, plain and simple.

Ebay in the US is bound to comply with the digital millennium copyright act and will have a process for you to follow to have the item removed. Hope you get it sorted out!
Anonymous said…
this is sad....i hope you are able to contact the people responsible for this and get it off ebay... good luck!!
Anonymous said…
want me to slash his tires?

totally kidding.
Anonymous said…
yup, happened to me too. Someone took a photograph I took of a mural I painted in my daughters' room and started selling the design on Etsy as vinyl wall graphics, claiming them as their own and using my photograph in the listing. Etsy and Big Cartel (and I assume Ebay or any hosting company for that matter) take copyright infringement very seriously. Look up "DMCA requirements for copyright infringement" on google and you can find the format to submit a notification to any hosting or marketplace legal department and they HAVE to comply with taking postings down, even expired/sold ones, and even disabling the user. And no, if your images on Flickr are set to ALL RIGHTS RESERVED that is what it means, you reserve the rights to the use, distribution and permissions of that photograph, even though we all know how easy it is to screenshot something (still, that's really illegal!). Stealing is stealing, regardless of the medium.
this picture has been stolen and that STINKS!

and it is definitely ILLEGAL here in germany, wether you use this picture commercial yourself or NOT.

i cannot tell you how i feel about all these stupid people out there stealing ideas, pictures and designs trying to make money with other peoples creativity!

at the moment this happens to me nearly every day, i'm so fed up with it.

you should report this to ebay, holly. and you should contact the seller and tell him to cancel this auction IMMEDIATELY!

xo
nic
forgot something...

and NO! all pictures uploaded at flickr are still licensed "all rights reserved" and copyrighted unless marked otherwise like:

Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike Creative Commons

Attribution-NonCommercial Creative Commons

Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs Creative Commons

Attribution Creative Commons

Attribution-ShareAlike Creative Commons

Attribution-NoDerivs Creative Commons


;o)
Anonymous said…
Shouldn't this be an issue for This Is Blythe? After all, YOU'RE not the copyright holder of the image of the doll, the true copyright holder is the doll manufacturer so this is...2nd party rights being violated here...
Anonymous said…
good thing I read down thru all the posts - Simone, you wrote exactly what I was going to say. Posting photos on Flickr does not mean giving up copyright. I wonder why the Australian phonecompany got away with it... probably because they had the more expensive lawyers....
Andy Mathis said…
oh wow. Boooooooooo!

Ebay should remove it, eventually if you reported it.

I have been away at the Atlanta Gift show, Decor8 seems to be down, so I wandered over here to see what you've been up to, and found this post.

Which made me think of what happened to this designer at the Atlanta Show. Sharyn Sowell posted this on a licensing board, and gave everyone permission to share her story and name.

Orphan Works bill has been debated quite passionately, both for and against. Sharyn experience shows why it's bad for artists making a living off their creative endeavors.

This is a long post, Holly, as I am copying and pasting it, in it's entirety. Feel free to contact Sharyn, http://www.sharynsowell.com if you have questions.

It's long so you might feel it's better in a post rather than a comment, as it relates to your situation, and Orphans Works.

From Sharyn-

During the Atlanta Gift show this weekend I had an experience that made me reflect again on the devastating effect the Orphan Works Bill will have on us if it should pass without alteration.

One of my licensing partners told me to go down to the temporaries, where someone had work that looked to him something similar to mine but with a twist.

When I got there I was shocked to see my own images photocopied and used as wall art. My art was her booth. I won't bore you with all the details but suffice it to say she admitted she'd stolen my work.

"I didn't mean to hurt you," she said, "I just used your pictures is all."

I picked up a catalog before I confronted her, along with her name. I faced her with the truth and she readily admitted to "borrowing" but insisted she didn't know where she'd gotten them. "I really don't know, I can't remember, I have so many sources," she told me.

I insisted on taking samples of the images, which she didn't want to give me. I said if she didn't give them to me I'd call the police and make sure they took photos. I got the samples and stuck them in my briefcase. The quality was so horrible I was embarrassed at such a bad knock off! This woman thought that because she was showing my work on the opposite side of the country I would never know of the theft. If I had not been tipped off I'd have missed it.

I wonder... how many of us have our work sitting in someone's portfolio or showroom and we have not discovered it yet. If we do happen to find such blatant copyright infringement, what will we do if OWB takes effect, and our hands are tied? As soon as the new legislature is seated we need to start sharing our concerns and insisting that legislators listen and act to protect intellectual property.

Right now the law protects me but under OWB this thief could say she had no idea who owned the image and I'd have no recourse. Let's stay informed and make sure we follow the developments, insist on our voices being heard. Don't let this fall by the wayside because you've got battle fatigue.

I've been knocked off before but it's always been by big corporations. This time I faced the individual, looked her squarely in the eyes and was shocked to see that she had no shame at all, no denial, no guilt. It was very personal. I felt like I'd returned home to discover a burglar in the house. It shocked me how intense I felt about it.

I'll be calling my attorney in the morning. This was a good reminder for me, and I share it in the hopes that you'll keep this issue at the forefront. Especially if you have a new legislator this is a great time to make your voice heard. This weekend it was me, but next time you could be the victim.

Sharyn Sowell
Anonymous said…
This kind of thing really disturbs me. Just because it's not a "physical" object, using your photo without permission is stealing.

This kind of thing is happening to a lot of people, unfortunately. One of my flickr contacts, a brilliant nature photographer in Iceland, found out (by accident) that a company in the UK was selling her art as posters. Another friend had some guy take all his photos of his native city (in Germany), put them on his photostream and say "I took these, I've been to this city". Really weird and really not cool.
LINDSAY said…
Argh! Doesn't that just really make you ill? I had the same thing happen. Someone cropped and removed my watermark from a print I had on etsy, added some swirly junk in the corner and plastered it on a tshirt, and put it on Ebay. I never would've known about it unless someone told me. Like I have time to go around policing the internet, ya know? Where is people's integrity?
haus maus said…
Anon - You said, "Shouldn't this be an issue for This Is Blythe? After all, YOU'RE not the copyright holder of the image of the doll, the true copyright holder is the doll manufacturer"

No I am the copyright owner of the photo. I took the photo. I own the photo. And I'm not selling it or putting it on products, I simply take pictures of dolls for fun and post it on Flickr to share with other Blythe doll fans.

Holly
Rachel B said…
I couldn't help it, I contacted the seller. I simply stated that I knew the photo was stolen, and that since there was nothing I could do about it, that I hoped karma was out there to make things right. Thieves suck.
Anonymous said…
I got a response from Ebay (I had reported the item and the seller a couple of days ago for you). BAD response. :(

Dear Audrey,

Thank you for writing eBay in regard to this concern.

Thank you for taking the time to contact us with this information. I
understand how this situation could be of some concern.

I have reviewed the information that you provided regarding the use of
images or text in item number 270329162763, but at this point find that
I do not have enough evidence to show that the member has violated any
eBay rules.

Regrettably, we will only be able to take action if the owner of the
images or text writes to us. In some instances, sellers may have
obtained permission to use the material. Therefore, we often cannot
remove listings based on the representations of third parties whose
credentials we cannot verify.

We do understand the potential for further issues in this type of
situation. That is why, if you feel strongly about this issue, we
recommend that you contact the owner of the images or text, and
recommend that they contact us directly. Once we hear from them, we will
take appropriate action.

Also, if your friend owns the copyright to those images, she should
consider applying to our VeRO program.

More information can be found here:

http://pages.ebay.com/help/tp/vero-rights-owner.html

We appreciate you taking the time to contact us with your concerns.
Thank you participating in the eBay community.

Thank you for your time.

Sincerely,
Skip
wow that is crazy! I mean it's kinda neat that somebody admired your stuff like that, but that is also plagiarism. You should be getting a profit. It looks like they outsourced it to Thailand too...you should be very careful and let them you are away of what they did and can take action.
How sad! Apparently that seller has no creativity of her own, she has to steal yours.

I work in a university library's video & computing department, and I have to give "the copyright speech" to our students & faculty pretty often. It's amazing how many people just don't get it. Just because it's easy to steal someone else's work doesn't mean it is ethical or legal to do so!
Anonymous said…
Thats horrible. Some people just don't get it. It's stealing and I just don't understand how you can enjoy money you made by stealing.

Hope Ebay will solve this soon!
Unknown said…
i got all fired up when i read this but them simone basically summed up what i wasy going to say about photos on flickr.

jennifer, what giant balls someone has to rip of your print that you sell (on etsy) and attempt to also sell it on etsy as their own. that's so low.
Kerry said…
That's pretty shady Holly. And amazing that someone actually found it!
Anonymous said…
Holly, ebay will respond promptly to a formal complaint from your friend. A similar incident happened to me, and they pulled the auction within a few hours of my complaint. Does your friend watermark her work? If not, she should--it will keep people from stealing her work or using it if they do.
Karen
Anonymous said…
omg! this just makes me so *bleeping* mad! please report this ebay store.
Anonymous said…
Hello, I love your blog and I'd like to know where did you find your shower curtain, I find great. Thank you, Patricia
Anonymous said…
Hello, I love your blog and I'd like to know where did you find your shower curtain, I find great. Thank you, Patricia
Anonymous said…
As violated as you may understandably feel, this is part of a new generation of commerce. It is occurring in music, literature, the internet. Every artistic avenue. Some would argue that intellectual property rights should not be considered in the same way that real property and patented concepts have been in the past. One way to think of it, especially if you did not intend to sell, is that it is a compliment. I know that feels lame, but this is a new century with lots of new ideas floating around out there. Why not ask the seller to at least credit you and ask them to refrain from using your wok in the future without your permission.
pedalpower said…
Some of us in a flickr group for standard poodle owners also had photos stolen and altered and sold on ebay and another site..They were selling them as "original oil paintings". Definitely report it. They should do their own work with the camera if they want to sell like this.

You still own the rights to anything you have posted on Flickr...posting images on Flickr does not put them in the public domain.
Anonymous said…
That's terrible! What a horrible thing to do! You should contact ebay. Montse.
alis said…
Listen to this: My photography student cousin's photography professor at his university entered a competition with my cousin's work! There was a big cash prize, I'm glad he didn't win!
thebubbreport said…
Holly, I reported it to eBay today. I was shocked the image was still up - had no one else reported it so far? Just go to eBay, go to HELP and search "report counterfeit" and follow the links. It should be more powerful if more people do this.

here is where you go - just put the auction number in:

http://pages.ebay.com/help/policies/replica-counterfeit.html

becky
thebubbreport said…
Oops, I was wrong, I looked at it too quickly! The auction had indeed ended, but I don't understand why the image was still there.
Sweetina said…
Gosh Holly, I am disappointed along with you in this. I don't know how someone like this sleeps at night, it's just so sleezy.
Flickr is such a wonderful platform for sharing all our images and collections and hobbies, so it is sad that a few rotten apples have no decorum or shame.
I hope you can find a way to rectify the situ.
Thankfully, the majority of people out there are honest and sweet, just like Yvonne, who reported this matter to you.
Big hug Holly,
Tina
Stacy said…
This is awesome. I love blythe!
Alison Gibbs said…
Oh no! Some people are so terrible!!!
Anonymous said…
ebay is not as great as it seems.
I am really sorry what happened to you, but unfortunately ebay is a great market for people like that.
It´s nearly anonymous and although they really try to block people that sell illegal or even stolen stuff, there will always be black sheep.
I read in your previous posts that you bought some furniture and I think a kitchen clock on ebay and everything worked out fine, thats great. As I am from Germany I have some sugestion for you. Next time you are looking for some vintage stuff you should look out in your newspaper for "Haushaltaufloesing" this is something like a garage sale, but most people give things away for free, nice stuff. As well I would recomend to visit "Flohmaerkte" (fleamarkets) where you can find all kind of great things sometimes expensive, but you have to negotiate.
(This is only in the summer.)
The great thing about it is that you can see what you buy (or get for free) and save a lot of shipping fees and as well get outside your four walls and meet new poeple. Isn't that great?
I hope I could help you out a little bit and get you even more excited to get back to Germany in May(?). Take care.
Anonymous said…
I reported it for you. I'm really sorry this happened. People do it all the time.


(:

I'll let you know what ebay says back to me.
Jenn said…
I remember going for a design job interview a few years ago. The woman interviewing me seemed distracted and not really with it. Eventually she tells me the guy she had in just before me had shown up with a portfolio full of work that didn't belong to him. And she knew this because the work actually belonged her! He'd just printed things out off other designers online portfolios and was passing them off as his own!
Makes you wonder if there are people on the other side of the world doing the same thing with your work.
Anonymous said…
Very difficult story. Ofcourse it stinks but if you are legally on the right side, is on you to find out which takes you a lot of time and energy. Is it worth it, to you?
I had been in a similar story with my old brand name. A big and rich company took part of the name, later than me, registered it as an international trademark and that was it. Hard to prove for me, but true. At the end i´ve chosen another businessname. Tja...
Anonymous said…
Oh, Holly, this is definitely theft, regardless of your intent when taking photographs. It makes me very sad to hear about it happening to you.

Certainly report it. This person has stolen something that is your intellectual property.

Very sorry, hope you can get this taken care of!
Unknown said…
This is crazy! I can't believe someone can get way with this.
Anonymous said…
I am so sorry this happened to you. As an artist/photographer, I do worry about getting ripped off, too. These days with the proper equipment it's pretty easy for someone to do that. So as a precaution, I watermark everything I put up on the web.
Ms Unreliable said…
That's really, really frustrating. How people think it's ok to just snag someone's work and try to make money out of it is beyond me. No conscience! Hope you get the response you deserve from either eBay or the seller.

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