Anti-Infringement Company Caught Infringing On Its Website
danomac writes "Canipre, a Canadian anti-infringement enforcement company, has been using photos on their official website without permission. This company hopes to bring U.S.-style copyright lawsuits to Canada, and they are the company behind Voltage's current lawsuits. It says right on their website, 'they all know it's wrong, and they're still doing it' overlaid on top of the image used without permission. Multiple photos from different photographers are used; none of them with permission. Canipre's response? 'We used a third party vendor to develop the website and they purchased images off of an image bank,' they said, trying to pass the blame to someone else. Some of the photos were released under the Creative Commons, meaning they could have used the photos legally if they'd provided proper attribution."
Does this sort of behavior still surprise anyone? The corporate world believes that it is immune from petty things like laws that apply to the rest of us. We've tacitly accepted "oh, some 3rd party messed up, not us" for so long that this is -- and will remain -- the norm (until governments start aggressively targeting corporations for violating the law).
Every artist with any IP on the web should send letters to Canipre, informing them that they will be sued for potential copyright infringement if they do not fork over $7,500 immediately.
In other words, give them a heaping helping of their own medicine.
An enigma, wrapped in a riddle, shrouded in bacon and cheese
"If you aren't paying me, it's wrong. If I'm not paying you, it's just sharp business."
Welcome to the Panopticon. Used to be a prison, now it's your home.
The point of this is to frighten the foolish into paying. The foolish will not be aware that for the price of a letter from a lawyer stating "Send all further correspondence to the Firm of XXXX, YYYY and ZZZZ" (the first time I used a lawyer to do that, it cost me $150), these copyright trolls will go away. This is about extorting money from those ignorant of the legislative limits to damages.
The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
Woosh! There goes the irony of it all right over your head.
Fact is most other decent human beings are not extorting other people and threatening with bankcrupt-worthy court cases. It doesn't matter if they infringed willfully or not. They didn't bother to follow their own rules, and expect other people to give them their money for rules they break themselves. Not out of charity, but under the threat of destroying lives, reputations and careers.
Captcha: evident
I would say you are a fool to not just throw the letting in the trash and forget it ever happened. Unless you get served, you have no legal obligation to even acknowledge the existence of the company let alone the letter they sent out.
have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same