What I Did When My Photos and Articles Were Stolen

What I Did When My Photos and Articles Were Stolen

Occasionally, it’s worth Googling your name to see what turns up. When I did it, it showed that a website was plagiarizing Fstoppers articles and stealing my photos too. This is what I did about it.

It’s not unusual for that to happen. Fstoppers and a few other photography sites employ writers known within the industry and, saying this with all modesty, who can write compelling articles and know how to use a camera. Articles at no financial cost to you, though writers are paid and Fstoppers receives ad revenue. Everybody wins.

Fstoppers own the written content; they contract me to write the article for them, and I get paid for that. If you are reading this, thank you; despite getting to read this for free, you have just helped put bread on my table. The photographs we provide for illustrating the articles are licensed to Fstoppers, but they still belong to us.

Occasionally, a new website will start up and copy and paste content from this and other sites into their web pages. You might think it is a compliment to the writer and photographer that someone thinks their work is good enough to be featured on their site. However, it is, of course, copyright theft. That is a possible felony punishable by huge fines and imprisonment.

Indeed, a relatively new website, let’s call it StolenPhotosRUs.com (not their real name), took my articles and images and republished them on their site. That was along with other Fstoppers articles and some written for different photography websites. They had put a comment at the bottom of each piece with a link, claiming, “This article was curated from the original publisher.”

I did some research and discovered the name and address of the website owner, let’s call him Nigel (not his real name either), the server that hosted it, and much other information about him and his business dealings.

After I highlighted the issue to Alex Cooke, the Editor-in-Chief here at Fstoppers, he wrote a comment on Nigel’s social media. Nigel replied and claimed it was an aggregate site and, therefore, legitimate. Nigel then turned off commenting on the post and deleted Alex’s comment and moved the conversation to a direct message. An actual aggregate site posts short previews of articles, and when people click on them, they are directed to the original site hosting the article, so that the proper creators get their revenue. StolenPhotosRUs.com wasn’t an aggregate site. Nigel copied and pasted the articles and photos directly into his website. Anyone clicking on the links were directed to his page, not Fstoppers. 

What should happen next? One option was to report Nigel to the National Intellectual Property Rights Coordination Center (IPRC) through the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), which is part of the UD Department of Homeland Security.

The US Department of Justice says this:

Although individuals or companies can pursue civil remedies to address violations of their intellectual property rights, criminal sanctions are often warranted to ensure sufficient punishment and deterrence of wrongful activity.

They go on to point out that infringement of copyright is a felony. It’s punishable by up to three years imprisonment and a $250,000 fine.

Similar harsh penalties are meted out here in the UK and elsewhere. Indeed, the internationally adopted Berne Convention covers much of copyright law. It’s one of the oldest laws known to exist because of the recognition that creators needed protection. Versions of our modern-day copyright laws can be found in ancient Greece from 8,000 years ago.

We have all had photos stolen occasionally. Most people send out takedown notices. However, on my website, I have terms of use with a scale of charges for those who use my images without seeking prior permission. If you use my photos without asking, you agree to pay those fees. My charges start at about £20,000 GBP per photo, per page, per month for a small commercial website like Nigel’s. The charge is there as a deterrent. If people buy the images, they will pay less. My fees are much higher for large businesses and higher still if anybody prints my work. Nigel had used my images 20 times.

I sent Nigel a £40,000 invoice and a strongly worded email about him using my images.

To cut a long story short, Nigel finally deleted all the offending articles and the writers’ photographs from his site. He has also removed those he had stolen from PetaPixel, DPReview, Shutterbug, and others. You are welcome, folks!

I’ve given Nigel the option of apologizing to the other writers. When he has done that, I will consider canceling the invoice I sent him.

So often, people don’t act when they are the victims of copyright theft. They accept it as normal. But it is not a victimless crime. Those of us who earn our living from this art lose our income. You would be unhappy if someone stole your wages.

There is also the misconception that if something is on the internet, it is fair game. It isn’t. Years ago, I was on a board for a reputable organization. One of the senior employees presented a new policy for the board to adopt. Before the board meeting, I checked it and found the author had taken it from another organization’s website. It was apparent because the staff member had used the imperfect find and replace function in Word to swap the names of the organizations. They hadn’t checked for the inevitable errors. They had also forgotten to change the different job titles that the other organization used. Furthermore, the writing was full of legalese that the staff member would never have been able to write. I pointed out that it was plagiarized at the board meeting.

The business’s senior manager claimed that if it was on the internet, it was in the public domain and, therefore, free to use. I suggested he should speak with the legal team. He did. The policy was not adopted.

Even some big websites are guilty of plagiarism. A few months back, one of our writers wrote an article here at Fstoppers. Within a few days, the same article, with the same paragraph structure but slightly rearranged words and a few synonyms added, appeared on another site, credited to a different writer. It was noticed. Both the writer’s and the website’s reputations were damaged as a consequence.

Using other people’s creative work without permission is a crime. Adding something like, “No copyright infringement intended” does not exempt you from the law if you steal someone else’s work. That’s akin to shoplifting and hanging a sign around your neck saying, “No theft intended.” That applies to writing, photographs, videos, and any created art. If you do it, you might receive a takedown notice. However, there is also the possibility that you end up with a hefty bill, a fine, and a few years in prison. I hope you will help stamp it out.

Ivor Rackham's picture

Earning a living as a photographer, website developer, and writer and Based in the North East of England, much of Ivor's work is training others; helping people become better photographers. He has a special interest in supporting people with their mental well-being through photography. In 2023 he became a brand ambassador for the OM System

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11 Comments

I see stolen Fstoppers articles all the time. They are pretty quick. Almost as if they have some kind of webcrawling script. It's only been 2 hours and I see two right away. They were up within 1 hour of the article post. They are easy to spot because they usually copy the title exactly.

https://ifolove.com/what-i-did-when-my-photos-and-articles-were-stolen/
https://news7g.com/what-did-i-do-when-my-photos-and-posts-were-stolen/

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Good research, Eddie!

How ironic is it that an article Ivor writes about his content getting stolen ... gets stolen within the first hours of being posted?

I wonder how many different websites are stealing Fstoppers content? How many dozens, or hundreds, of website operators is Ivor going to have to hunt down and contact to prevent his articles from being stolen? It could become a full time job.

Most of these are easy to track down and they are stealing from multiple sites. The answer to your question is that, from now on, I am just going to report them to the appropriate authorities and let them face the consequences.

Thanks for highlighting these. The News7g site is based in Hanoi, so little chance of them acting, so I have contacted their website's host. ifolove is based in the US, the authorities can deal with them!

Wow!

I recently set up a Google notification for when my name pops up on the internet. Google alerts me. I never knew about that until recently but it's been a good resource

That's really cool, Michelle. Thanks.

I really like using https://www.pixsy.com/ to find offenders. There was one photo of me I had forgotten about and was about ready to contact them until I visited the page and realized I had given them permission over a decade ago. I used to have Binded account and later on learned they closed my Binded account because they merged with Pixsy. Which is fine as l like the Pixsy interface much better.

That's cool. I've seen a few reverse image search services and that one seems great. Thanks for the tip.

People who lift articles should realize how much work we writers put into each article. When I do a repost, (“Hey look at this cool video I found on YouTube”), it takes me about an hour to write it, even though it is only 2 paragraphs or so. When I write an original article, I spend about 5-8 hours writing it. Articles where I have interviewed another photographer or interviewed someone from Getty, take even longer.

I turn in an original every other week and it takes a lot of thought for me to come up with an interesting topic for the article. I love writing for FStoppers and I’m honored to post my work here. But make no mistake that it is very hard work for me. Honestly, it is easier for me to pack my lighting gear and do an on location portrait shoot than it is for me to write an original article. So when someone isn’t willing to do the work that I do to write an article, it is offensive that they would just lift my article and post it on their site.

I can certainly relate to those who have had images used for commercial purposes without permission or payment. as I am not a writer, I can't comment on any stolen articles, however photos are a different matter.
CopyTrack - https://www.copytrack.com/ is the image theft organisation I use (thanks for the Pixsy tip Captain Jack R , will check them out later today) and found them to be pretty handy. located in the EU, all financial payments are in Euros and they to take out a 40% commission on recovered fees.
the biggest problem I've encountered is those multi site travel pages that seemingly have no contact details. one such page is https://worldtourismgroup.com/ who have used several of my photos... here's one of them which has been overly processed and tilted - https://images.worldtourismgroup.com/worldtourismgroup-image/south-ameri... and the original - https://www.joc.id.au/2017/ship7/content/SthAmerica_resize_1159_large.html
not sure if stolen from there, or when it was posted to Flickr.
speaking of Flickr... how many here know that copyrighted images can be used for
news reporting, criticism or review, parody or satire, personal research or study, people with disabilities and copying by libraries and more (such as legal advice), without permission?
This is known as Fair Use or Fair Dealings, depending on which country you are from.
I've had more than a few Flickr users getting there knickers in a twist when I criticize/review their photos on social media, those who have something like this on their 'About' page:
"All images are protected by registered licensed copyright and are the exclusive property of Bob LaGrange and are protected under the United States and International Copyright laws.
These images may not be reproduced, copied, transmitted, nor manipulated without the prior written permission.
If you are interested in using any of my images, please contact me to make arrangements"
one user in particular have had Twitter and Facebook send out copyright notices to me, until I re-educate all involved of the Fair Use terms. many can't be educated of course.
cheers