I'm going to agree with Kipax, why not pop over to the breeder and explain the situation to them. Get a copy of the card and see what their intention was with the card. Normally Christmas cards from companies are there for advertisement. If they weren't, the breeder would use a bog standard off the shelf card from a shop, not go through the effort of designing and printing cards for their customers.
For god sake stop being greedy.
You gave them some photos you took for fun and they printed them on a Christmas card?
Be flattered, not greedy. This sounds like a great way to make them hate you and they probably wont pay up anyway.
If you want to make money from photos then find a professional way to do it. Don't wait for an innocent act by a previously-friendly neighbor then pounce on them quoting copyright law and demanding a nominal sum of money out of principle.
They will have to pay up or face court. I'd also like to ask, how is this greedy? It costs every time one presses a shutter release. Camera bodies, lenses, flash guns, batteries and other equipment only have a certain lifespan.
The way I see it - it's only a copyright issue if we're talking about a professional photographer here.
Copyright was designed to protect professionals from lost income due to copying.
If you never had ANY intentions of making money off the picture then stop trying to abuse a practical law for reasons of principle, and try being a friendly citizen instead.
Copyright was designed to protect everyone, not just businesses, from having their creativity copied. That is why in law, the author, unless employed, owns the first copyright to any artistic works.
Abuse of the law comes from companies and individuals who try to enforce the law on others without having the authority to do such. It is not an abuse of law to abide by and utilise it with the legal authority to do so. There are many aspects of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988 that extend beyond simply copying of artistic works. Things like moral issues and how artistic works are used, what they convey in context and whether that is detrimental to the author or whether it is morally unacceptable to the author. An example would be a photographer who sued a pornographic producer for using her image on their DVD. She was a private individual whose creativity was copied and distributed without a care as to what the author thought.
Further things Copyright law enable are the free usage of sound recordings for background music at clubs, the usage of copyrighted materials in educational establishments and the lawful ability to make back up copies of computer programs. (S. 67, S. 32-36A, S. 50A Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988)
Now that to me implies that the images were given electronically. Well, when I sell electronic images, they include copyright. If there is an issue here then its with the kitten owner and the breeder as the kitten owner owns copyright, no?
Simply? No. The kitten owner, or any other model for that matter, has no interest, ownership, claim to or over any photograph taken of them or their property unless agreed with the original owner of copyright. Models can object to their image being used only if it is being used in a libellous manner.
if i was the breeder and got a bill i would send one for back for 5 times the price via a legal firm for using the cat as a model. tread carefully or you could wind up with this backfiring.
I would hope the legal firm would tell you that you were stark raving mad. Firstly, you have sold property or otherwise transferred the ownership of property to someone else. It is no longer yours to protect. Secondly, you have no rights over an image, whether you or your property is depicted or not.
Copyright law in the United Kingdom is exceptionally straight forward. The person who creates the art is the owner unless they are employed. Copyright is akin to property, you can sell it, transfer it, rent it, or leave it in a cupboard for the rest of your life.
A similar thing happened to me a while back, when a french magazine published a photo I'd taken of my friend who happens to be a well known actress. The guys on this forum suggested that I should have been paid. I contacted the magazine and finally got some money from them. I was grateful to the advice given to me on this forum. But are these breeders selling these cards? If not, maybe you should just ask for some kind of acknowledgement, and ask them politely not to use your images again unless you give them your permission.
I remember that! I'm glad you got the issue resolved in the end
