This Photo Has Been STOLEN From Me 14+ Times!! (And What I Did to Protect My Work)
It's not even really that great of a photo, and it was taken several years ago for practice when @winstonwolfe and I still had time for date nights and photo adventures.
But because the subject is our local downtown skyline, this early piece of my work has been yanked off of Facebook or Google by several companies looking for content for their websites to target residents in the Springfield area.
I just so happened to stumble onto the first copyright infringement by accident. I was doing a reverse Google image search for a completely different photo, and there it was, staring me in the face - my work on a number of local business's websites or websites targeting local residents. One of Winston's images from the same spot on the same date night was there, too.
Even though the images were taken in fun, they are special to the two of us. Due to building projects in the area, they can never be recreated. There are now buildings blocking a majority of the skyline.
Right away, I was flooded with strange emotions I had never felt before. It was a weird mix of flattery and gross violation. The only place on the internet I had ever uploaded this photo was my own, private Facebook page!!
Unfortunately, there is an extremely large group of people out there who don't understand what it's like to spend so much time building a skill and a consistent product to base your business off of, just to have your work taken without being paid for.
It kind of felt like I had been the victim of internet shoplifting! ("Clean up of intellectual property on aisle one, please!")
How I Fought Back to Protect My Work
Many months before, I had joined up with a company called Pixsy, who makes it their mission to seek out copyright infringements and try to collect payment from the "thiefs" by legal, professional means.
Now, keep in mind that Pixsy takes half of any proceeds they are able to get for you, but they are still an efficient way to approach this kind of situation without barely lifting a finger.
All I had to do was submit my cases to Pixsy and wait...
They kept me updated through emails, but the back-and-forth process of contacting the business or website owner did take a few months. As you can see from my case submissions above, a couple were not accepted. Pixsy told me that it was because they had taken on cases like that before, and based on the info they gathered, it was not worth the time to pursue those particular infringements.
But eventually, THIS HAPPENED:
Pixsy is free to join, and they will monitor 500 of your images online with the free membership. If you feel you need to protect more of your work, they have upgrades available for a decent price.
After this incident, I often check back with a Google image search to make sure there are no new cases I need to submit, and I currently have 4 more cases still pending.
We live in an age where it's almost impossible for artists to protect their hard work with 100% accuracy, but with companies like Pixsy scouring the internet for copyright infringements, it at least makes it a little easier! Don't be a victim!
Nice tip about Pixsy, so far I've only had people who wanted my images for free, to which I denied =)
Good for you!! None of these people even bothered to ask. lol
Photography is becoming a hard business, and services like Pixabay diminish the value of those living off of photography.
I'm glad you are being paid for your work and thank you for telling us about this site.
I've been wanting to pass this along for a while, but I just wanted to wait until I had more followers because I know it's useful info to have. I really enjoy helping my fellow artists!
a solid post. considering how many photographer friends i've got, this would benefit so many of them.
Most of the photos I take I'm happy to share (with attribution) but I will keep this in mind for the photos I consider more special to me
Wow, this is exciting. I used to watermark my photos but it was just too much work to watermark everything. I still take photos but I don't share as much as I used to. I'll definitely look into Pixsy asap. Thanks!
Watermarks help, but not very much it seems. A few of these companies cropped out the watermark, so it was kind of like adding insult to injury! lol
Great post and great idea! As a graphic designer, i never upload full size photographs i take. In photoshop, its really easy to downsize from your default 72 inch wide photo down to say, 10 inches at 72 dpi. It will surely stop anyone from using it in production. While photoshop is expensive for just resizing images, theres sure to be free programs that can perform the same basic function. Check out my posts! I recently blogged a photojournal
That's also a great step to take! However, that will really only prevent anyone from being able to snag an image and print it with decent quality. They would still be able to use that low-quality image on a website.
Gimp is a great open-source alternative to Photoshop. Not nearly as powerful, overall, but good for the basics like resizing.
Crazy cool that your image was so good that others wanted it. I really like the photograph and I'm glad Pixsy was able to help
Thanks! It's took my by complete surprise, really. I had almost forgotten the photo existed! lol
Really a helpful post! Knowing that your photo is being used by someone who is making money from it in some way is so frustrating when it's not cost-effective for you to do anything about it. Pixsy makes it possible to stop photo theft! Cool!
You're right, it is very frustrating!!
While they can't prevent the theft from happening, they can definitely help with the next steps after someone crosses the line.
Image is so amazing reason behind stealing the photo. I am not stealing but keeping it to me.
Beautiful view