The image had no copyright on it.
Under US law, images haven't need to have copyright notices on them since 1989.
I think this guy is either just seeding the internet with unwatermarked images so he can threaten people or claiming ownership in images he doesn't own and then trying to extort money out of people.
Yeah, because allowing your work to propagate online and collecting on infringements is such a wonderful business model... except, wait, what about the challenges of trying to get any kind of of compensation from places outside the US? You know, where the other 96% of the global population is?
He carries on his page about people stealing images like some kind of baby.
Spoken like someone who has never worked to create something in their life. There's time, effort, expense, experience and skill that goes into the creations of professional photographers and other creatives
Seriously, it is an image on the internet. I'm not selling his image. I can get a better image on istock for a few bucks.
So why didn't you? Why did you simply lift work from the web instead of either paying a license from iStock (or similar) or, you know, going out and creating something of your own?
Asking a few hundred bucks is shameful and should be a crime.
The photographer is offering you the chance to pay for something you have already used. As his work, he sets the rate. If you thought it was too high, you could have negotiated - but no, by your own admission, you told him to "fuck off" instead, showing that you lack either respect or contrition.
Who is to say his copyright registration is falsified too?
I guess you'll find out in short order because, like i said, both Tom Schwabel and Peter Lik have copyright registrations filed with the Library of Congress... so odds are you may well hear from counsel for at least one of them in the future
Who sends a "legal notice" by email? Whole thing sounds like a scam.
Lots of people send out legal notices via email, and often follow up by sending the same notice via the postal service - except, you know, unless you're hiding behind a pseudonym or domain proxy service.
Want to know what's a scam? Lifting images off the internet with abandon and then crying about it when the copyright holder finds out.
Man up, take responsibility for your actions, make an offer to the photographer for your admitted prior use of their work, and learn something from the experience.