Image Theft And Identity Theft In One Fell Swoop

On January 4th I published a blog post regarding this image that had been stolen from my Feathered Photography galleries.  My copyright had been removed and replaced with the logo of someone else and the image was posted on Facebook under the name of Alessandro Pinna  (I’m appalled at the poor quality of this version due to overcompression…)     As I reported before, I filed a DMCA takedown notice with Facebook and the image was removed the next day.  But many other images on that FB account had been stolen and the comment section was brimming with vitriol and extreme anger.  Justifiably so. It turns out that the real Alessandro Pinna has apparently been the victim of identity theft on FB and is innocent in this entire matter.  Yesterday, he posted this police report on his website.  I then posted the link to the police report on a FB group I belong to that is dedicated to dealing with image theft.  At that time I was yet unsure about what was really going on. Then today, I received the following email from the real Alessandro Pinna (quoted with permission).  He had seen both my blog post and the fact that I had posted the police report to the FB group. Dear Ron,    I am writing to you because I just found out you guys are mentioning my name and my website on your blog. I just wanted to confirm it’s my name this guy has stolen and so I had to start the process to defend myself and clear…

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Image Thieves Burn My Butt!

Image thievery is a huge issue for me and virtually all other serious photographers who have websites or blogs.  I just don’t understand why some folks think they have the right to steal the images of others.  Social media sites like Facebook, Pinterest and tumblr are a big part of the problem (though it certainly exists elsewhere on the web).  Each of these sites has policies in their terms of service that prohibit members from infringing on the intellectual property rights of others and allows them to disable the accounts of those who abuse the policy.  For example, from the terms of service of Facebook: “If you repeatedly infringe other people’s intellectual property rights, we will disable your account when appropriate.”   Social media sites also have online forms that allow legitimate copyright holders to file Digital Millenium Copyright Act (DMCA) take-down notices with those respective sites.  Sadly, I’m coming to know these procedures well and some of those accounts have been disabled permanently because of repeated abuse. Below is just one example of how flagrant and egregious these violations can be.   This image of a male American Kestrel is in my Feathered Photography image galleries (link to the photo).  Every page and photo in those galleries contains this statement:  “All images are the property of Ron Dudley and are protected under international copyright laws“.         But last week I was alerted by someone who recognized my image on the Facebook page of someone else.  Notice that my copyright has been removed and replaced by the logo of Alessandro Pinna. …

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