Let me give you an analogy.
You go to a restaurant. You order an a nice meal and pay for it. As you are leaving a farmer comes up to you and says “You ate my tomatoes!” “You owe me $1000 for eating my tomato.”
As you are looking puzzled, the farmer explains that the tomato in your salad that you just ate and paid for is his and it was not paid for by the restaurant. You explain that you just sat down at the table, ordered, ate and paid the restaurant.
“No matter” says the farmer. “It was my tomato and you should pay penalties far beyond the cost of the tomato normally.” “It is your responsibility since you ate it.”
No one questions the right of photographers to make a living. The issue here is that people bought templates or hired professionals to create sites and images were used which the purchaser of the web site design assumed were properly used. there is so much free or very cheap imagery that there is not REASON to steal it.
So for Masterfile or Getty to pull this ruse is absurd. If they sent a note out and said, Hey, pay us the $49 each for those 3 images…people would pay, not problem. It is billing people $3K for 3 images which were mistakenly used that is the issue. It is similiar to forms of extortion.
You go to a restaurant. You order an a nice meal and pay for it. As you are leaving a farmer comes up to you and says “You ate my tomatoes!” “You owe me $1000 for eating my tomato.”
As you are looking puzzled, the farmer explains that the tomato in your salad that you just ate and paid for is his and it was not paid for by the restaurant. You explain that you just sat down at the table, ordered, ate and paid the restaurant.
“No matter” says the farmer. “It was my tomato and you should pay penalties far beyond the cost of the tomato normally.” “It is your responsibility since you ate it.”
No one questions the right of photographers to make a living. The issue here is that people bought templates or hired professionals to create sites and images were used which the purchaser of the web site design assumed were properly used. there is so much free or very cheap imagery that there is not REASON to steal it.
So for Masterfile or Getty to pull this ruse is absurd. If they sent a note out and said, Hey, pay us the $49 each for those 3 images…people would pay, not problem. It is billing people $3K for 3 images which were mistakenly used that is the issue. It is similiar to forms of extortion.