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Bottom line reply is that he is responsible. It's his website.My questions are: am I responsible for this or is he?
In the real world you or he are highly unlikely, in fact it's almost a certainty that you or he will be taken to court.
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I'm afraid this is incorrect. webdesign33 committed the infringement by copying it and using it, and is therefore liable. The website owner is also liable but would probably be able to pass on his losses by suing the designer.Bottom line reply is that he is responsible. It's his website.
Google is a search engine - it searches websites. Anything it displays must be on a website - where exactly did you think the image came from?In the meantime I used an image from google images as a placeholder (I was just starting up and had never/have never needed to source images since as clients have always provided them. I had no idea the image was from getty).
You both are - see my response above.My questions are: am I responsible for this or is he?
I don't know the legal answer to that but I suspect you might be correct. However, if you get into a legal argument with your client he may end up paying their legal costs but you end up paying his.If I am responsible, surely the £400 + VAT are due to his error in not dealing with it. The letter was after all addressed to him..
If you say or offer something "without prejudice" it means the other party can't use that information against you in court. They can't say to the judge "they admitted it was worth $800" - It allows you to negotiate without those words later being used against you.What is the best way for me to deal with this? He mentions something along the lines of perhaps making 'a without prejudice offer' - what is this?
Go to their site and select a similar image for 2 years commercial use on the web and see what cost it spits out.How does getty calculate the cost? The demand letter offers no explanation.
Sorry, I meant that it is almost certain that you will not be taken to court. My bad English!Thanks bdw. I'm not sure what you mean, it's unlikely or almost a certainty that me or him will be taken to court?
No, it's not incorrect. AFAIK liability for the copyright infringement lies with the website owner.I'm afraid this is incorrect. webdesign33 committed the infringement by copying it and using it, and is therefore liable. The website owner is also liable but would probably be able to pass on his losses by suing the designer.
No, it's not incorrect. AFAIK liability for the copyright infringement lies with the website owner.
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It's the copyright infringement we are discussing here.The copyright infringement yes, but the professional negligence is with the designer.
Nothing at all.If the website owner gets stung for £1500 what's to stop him then suing the designer for a lot more. (the cost to him, cost to reputation, his costs etc.)
It's the copyright infringement we are discussing here.
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I am certainly not trying to be rude here but unfortunately what you "know" is incorrect. The person who commits the offence is liable. The website owner is also liable (which is actually a little unfair in cases where their web designer lied about the origins of the image) but the person committing the original offence is definitely liable.No, it's not incorrect. AFAIK liability for the copyright infringement lies with the website owner.
I am certainly not trying to be rude here but unfortunately what you "know" is incorrect. The person who commits the offence is liable. The website owner is also liable (which is actually a little unfair in cases where their web designer lied about the origins of the image) but the person committing the original offence is definitely liable.
The designer/OP copied the image without consent of the copyright holder (which is clear infringement of copyright) and used it to make the web site. He was almost certainly guilty of distributing a copyright work (another infringement) when he sent the proof site layout (or a link to a test site) to his client. There may well be a separate offence due to the we site owner launching the site (thus distributing the image to a load more people) but that doesn't alter the fact that the designer did infringe the copyright holders rights and is liable.
Just for clarity I would say the following is as simplistic as I can make it
The site OWNER has to settle with the IP owner
The site DESIGNER has to settle with the site owner.
The site OWNER can't pass DIRECT liability to the site DESIGNER (as in telling the IP holder to deal with the site DESIGNER) as that isn't how the law works
Getty could also go after the designer too, ending up with the designer paying twice.
The internet and webdesign is such a new industry and has had little or no regulation, it has to change soon, hopefully, despite what people think of Getty, things like this will help long term and web design will only be done by professionals not kids in bedrooms.
What is the point of single seat licences if designers can't be done for using the images too?
The designer has used the image without a licence and profited from the use of the image, why can they get away with that?
This is wrong. Please do not post your opinion as fact. This is a thread that is being watched by a lot of worried people so don't post misinformation and you are not helping them. Thanks.Getty could also go after the designer too, ending up with the designer paying twice.
This is wrong. Please do not post your opinion as fact. This is a thread that is being watched by a lot of worried people so don't post misinformation and you are not helping them. Thanks.
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No, I am not saying that at all. All I am saying is that website owners are responsible for any copyright infringements on their websites. This is a fact that was clearly established five or more years ago when this process kicked off. The imaging companies even make a point of telling people this in their letters.Are you saying a website designer can just get images from anywhere to build websites without fear of copyright infringement providing he doesn't publish them, or that after they are published responsibility is passed to the website owner?
Web designers who do as you suggest leave themselves open to action by the website owners but they are not held responsible by the imaging companies for the original infringement.
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So you are effectively saying website designers can get images from anywhere to make mock-up sites as long as they are not published?
yes because up until that point it is for private use
That would still be considered private use. If you think about it the imaging companies would lose out on a lot of business if web designers and other professionals could not use comp images. It's an accepted practice.
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I give up.
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Thanks,
I know this thread and most the posts are about Getty, but I am talking about taking images in general.
I know Getty use the easy route and go for the site owner rather than the website designer, but probably just because they suspect the site owner will fold rather than the designer.
Ignoring what Getty do, it would be nice to know what would happen if a designer started lifting images from a professional photographers site to use for making mock-ups and the photographer found out.
I do know the answer, I gave it to you in a clear and unambiguous way. What I don't know is how I can make it any clearer to you? :|:|:|Meaning you don't know the answer and what you post is your opinion?
Yes he most certainly can. It is the act of publishing the images that constitutes the copyright offence. Although I can't think of a reason why anyone would set out to build websites that were not to be published?yes, a website designer can just get images from anywhere to build websites without fear of copyright infringement providing he doesn't publish them?
I often upload comp images to client's websites to let them preview them. If they like the images I then buy them on my account. If not then they are removed.Comp images are screen-sized low-resolution images which clients may use free of charge to create a layout and mock-up design prior to committing to a purchase.
So you are effectively saying website designers can get images from anywhere to make mock-up sites as long as they are not published?
Of course not. Copyright is an exclusive Right to Copy. If you copy an image onto a mockup site without permission you are breaching copyright.
OWG and BDW are confusing what has become industry practice with what the CDPA 1988 says.
Of course not. Copyright is an exclusive Right to Copy. If you copy an image onto a mockup site without permission you are breaching copyright.
OWG and BDW are confusing what has become industry practice with what the CDPA 1988 says.