As I've said before and nicely illuminated by DvG's listing of legal and "do the right thing*" email and phone call victories, it's obvious that there's easy money to be made off one's creative work as long as a person's willing and morally capable of sending out emails and letters threatening people with lawsuits.
And, Lord knows, a $350 filing fee plus a percentage to various teams of lawyers (for example, six in the U.S. and one in Canada with, perhaps, new filing paperwork associates with scary letterheads being considered for hire in England, France, German, Spain, Japan, Russia, Bolivia, Iceland, Argentina, Mexico, and Greenland) represents a terrific investment when you know that move will force a settlement out of most likely almost ALL of those who didn't knuckle under to the initial settlement demand emails giving them the opportunity "to do the right thing.*"
DvG, of course you don't want to answer my questions about your income percentages because doing so would reveal facts that you need to keep hidden if you want to maintain any kind of credibility here on ELI. Everyone with three functioning brain cells understands that.
DvG, of course your terms are confidential. Confidentiality agreements represent one of the main reasons lawyers and trolls get away with the various schemes they get away with.
Quick rant: If all legal results were a matter of public record as they should be in a free and open society that has fair laws legislated to attain justice instead of laws designed to help greedy bastards line their pockets, internet copyright trolls and their collection agent lawyers would be forced to do some honest work to earn their daily bread instead of cashing in using fear, threats of lawsuits, and bullshit confidentiality agreements to keep their slimy schemes private.
"Everyone has a right to an opinion." Yep, but even though they can get away with it and indeed often gloat and brag about it, speculative invoicers do not have the right to lie or twist truth and laws to make money off those who scare easily or those who are intimidated by smooth talking bastards into paying money for images when as far back as 2008 there were already more than 40,000,000,000 photographs on the internet. Charging $100 to $200 for a de minimus infringement is not right in my book. But for some people it's obviously a satisfying ("I cleared $850 today, honey, with six quick phone calls!"), entertaining ("Damn, dog, I love fleecing the rubes!"), as well as an absurdly easy business model to haul in some serious money with very little work.
*To do the right thing -- In too many cases involving copyright trolls, that means... Pay me money for an image I bulk registered or didn't register at all because I know I can make a sweet percentage of my living playing Speculative Invoicing for Dollars.
And, Lord knows, a $350 filing fee plus a percentage to various teams of lawyers (for example, six in the U.S. and one in Canada with, perhaps, new filing paperwork associates with scary letterheads being considered for hire in England, France, German, Spain, Japan, Russia, Bolivia, Iceland, Argentina, Mexico, and Greenland) represents a terrific investment when you know that move will force a settlement out of most likely almost ALL of those who didn't knuckle under to the initial settlement demand emails giving them the opportunity "to do the right thing.*"
DvG, of course you don't want to answer my questions about your income percentages because doing so would reveal facts that you need to keep hidden if you want to maintain any kind of credibility here on ELI. Everyone with three functioning brain cells understands that.
DvG, of course your terms are confidential. Confidentiality agreements represent one of the main reasons lawyers and trolls get away with the various schemes they get away with.
Quick rant: If all legal results were a matter of public record as they should be in a free and open society that has fair laws legislated to attain justice instead of laws designed to help greedy bastards line their pockets, internet copyright trolls and their collection agent lawyers would be forced to do some honest work to earn their daily bread instead of cashing in using fear, threats of lawsuits, and bullshit confidentiality agreements to keep their slimy schemes private.
"Everyone has a right to an opinion." Yep, but even though they can get away with it and indeed often gloat and brag about it, speculative invoicers do not have the right to lie or twist truth and laws to make money off those who scare easily or those who are intimidated by smooth talking bastards into paying money for images when as far back as 2008 there were already more than 40,000,000,000 photographs on the internet. Charging $100 to $200 for a de minimus infringement is not right in my book. But for some people it's obviously a satisfying ("I cleared $850 today, honey, with six quick phone calls!"), entertaining ("Damn, dog, I love fleecing the rubes!"), as well as an absurdly easy business model to haul in some serious money with very little work.
*To do the right thing -- In too many cases involving copyright trolls, that means... Pay me money for an image I bulk registered or didn't register at all because I know I can make a sweet percentage of my living playing Speculative Invoicing for Dollars.