Ebay Shop Scrapes Thingiverse, Sells Designs In Violation of Creative Commons (all3dp.com)
He Who Has No Name writes: A little over a week ago, Thingiverse user Loubie posted Sad Face! to Thingiverse, protesting the use — without permission — of their designs and those of others by JustPrint3D, an Ebay seller marketing physical prints of the designs in question (over 2,000 by some counts). Despite a terse and legally shaky denial of any wrongdoing by JustPrint3D, there are obviously multiple violations of various iterations of the Creative Commons licenses (several forms of the CC license are options for Thingiverse uploaders to assign to their Things when uploading, and one is the default). Now MakerBot itself is wading into the uproar firmly on the side of its users, and has released a statement mentioning potential legal action.
Remember readers, if you download a copy of something in violation of the license it's only a crime if the people you are ripping off make less money each year than you do.
Go ahead, download that rip of Deadpool, but if you so much as think about printing out a Thingiverse file without attaching a notice of original authorship to the final product, you're worse than Hitler.
Do you have to publish the minutes?
"I move that the board drink another Pina Colada....All in favour?"