This problem is getting more out of hand every day.
The only way you can protect your images from being stollen, is to
not upload them to the web in the first place.
I have read recently of a well known pro photographer, displaying another persons image on their
own website, as their own. Only to be spotted by someone who knew the original photog, so after a request it was removed.
This pro however has done this many times before, and still manages to supply big orginisations with images.
The best way to protect yourself is to water mark your photos, but remember it doesn't take much to remove a water mark.
I did a little test and downloaded an 800 pixel image, opened it up in photoshop, then using one of the many
available interpolation packages, made it into quite a large image. The interpolation packages these days do a
very good job of keeping the detail, so the small image posted on the web can easily be made into a quite substantial
framed piece of art.
photo-request said:
i had a big argument about this the other day
i was in skipton looking at the craft fair as i mentioned to some of you in the chat room, thinking of getting a stall. Well to cut a long story short there was someone selling prints that were stunning, so as a photographer does you try and talk to them.
I asked him what camera he used and he said i dont have a camera, so i said how do you take these stunning photos. He said i dont, i find pictures i like scan them and tweak them a bit and then print them off.
Well that was it i blew my top and explained uk law to him, he said it didnt matter to him as he gets pictures he likes off the internet from sites hosted in china, as the copyright laws arnt the same over there and he can get a way with it. I informed him that i supply 6 stock sites and if i ever see one of my images for sale on his stall that i would take legal action so fast he wouldnt make it back to blackpool.
Have you not reported him to your local trading standards?
I'm sure they would like to hear about this.
If he's earning a living dishonestly, He may be also defrauding the .gov
It doesn't matter if he downloads them from China, as UK law is UK law.
He can still be prosecuted under the copyright protection act.