MICHAEL WHELAN

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Fake Dark Tower Facebook Page I’ve been dealing with copyright issues on this fake Dark Tower Facebook page long enough that I’m just going to point the finger at them and call them...
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Fake Dark Tower Facebook Page

I’ve been dealing with copyright issues on this fake Dark Tower Facebook page long enough that I’m just going to point the finger at them and call them thieves.

https://www.facebook.com/The-Dark-Tower-1184787551553019/

If you know anyone who likes this page, please let them know they are supporting theft. The only reason this page exists is to run t-shirt campaigns that rip off Stephen King and artists who have worked on his books.

We thought Facebook banned the page a few months back but it recently popped up again. I wish I could say that’s surprising but it’s not. Copyright violation is pervasive and social media platforms don’t do enough to stop this behavior.

    • #Michael Whelan
    • #copyright violation
  • 7 years ago
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Ka is a wheel and so is this scam

Just like clockwork, The Dark Tower comes out on video and fake Facebook Fan Pages start ripping off artists again. Here’s the latest batch violating Michael Whelan’s copyrights that I just reported.

The Dark Tower page here is obviously not the official one, but 15k people think it is. They post memes in between ad cycles for t-shirts. Teechip and Sunfrog are the same print on demand service that enables this kind of theft.

    • #Michael Whelan
    • #copyright violation
  • 8 years ago
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The Ever Changing Game

So why is defending copyright such a tedious process? Here’s yet another t-shirt design advertised on Facebook on 5/25 for a campaign on Teechip. But this time around something is different.

When clicking through the ad, the campaign page on Teechip no longer has a link to report the campaign. Instead, you have to follow the DMCA (digital millennium copyright act) link at the bottom of the page to get an email to report the copyright infringement in a completely different way.

Because we deal with this so often, we have standard boilerplate to send in for all of these printing companies. But this illustrates how Teechip makes it difficult for artists to report copyright. They are an unethical business that hides behind safe harbor provisions of copyright law and profits from unreported copyright violation.

    • #Michael Whelan
    • #copyright violation
  • 8 years ago
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Michael Whelan's Webmaster On Fighting Online Art Theft - Unbound Worlds

Tip of the hat to Shawn Speakman and Unbound Worlds for running this interview with me about the growing problem of copyright infringement that artists face online. ~ME

    • #Michael Whelan
    • #copyright violation
  • 8 years ago
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Here’s where we’re at with the list of artists whose work was used without license in that one Etsy shop. Most of the artists have been contacted directly, but I’m waiting to hear back from a few.
• Jimmy Cauty - classic 70s LoTR poster
• Jules...
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Here’s where we’re at with the list of artists whose work was used without license in that one Etsy shop. Most of the artists have been contacted directly, but I’m waiting to hear back from a few.

  • Jimmy Cauty - classic 70s LoTR poster
  • Jules Feiffer - Phantom Tollbooth Map
  • Matt Ferguson - Stranger Things poster
  • David Finch - Dark Tower / Marvel Comics
  • Mary GrandPre - Harry Potter (all rights held by Warner Bros)
  • John Howe - classic LoTR illustrations
  • Michael Komarck - Song of Ice & Fire
  • Paul Kidby - Discworld
  • Jae Lee - Dark Tower / Marvel Comics
  • Iñaki Aliste Lizarralde - TV Floor Plans
  • Todd Lockwood - Drizzt
  • Bill Mudron - Avatar: The Last Airbender map
  • Ted Nasmith - LoTR
  • Stephen Player - Discworld Map
  • Marc Simonetti - Kingkiller Chronicles
  • Priscilla Spencer - Codex Alera map
  • Isaac Stewart - Mistborn and Stormlight maps
  • Chase Stone - Song of Ice & Fire
  • Steve Stone - Dark Tower covers
  • Russell Stutler - Sherlock Holmes Floorplan
  • Justin Sweet - Song of Ice & Fire
  • Nate Taylor - Kingkiller Chronicles map
  • Keith Thompson - Leviathan map
  • Jerry VanderStelt - LoTR (license held by Warner Bros)
  • Michael Whelan - Dark Tower and Stormight Archive

BTW, maps are artwork and fall under copyright too. I know, duh.

I will continue to update this list as more artists are identified. To see all posts in this thread, follow the copyright violation tag.

    • #Michael Whelan
    • #copyright violation
  • 8 years ago
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theartofmichaelwhelan:

theartofmichaelwhelan:

This rabbit hole goes deep. Tons of other artists ripped off in this Etsy shop: https://www.etsy.com/shop/TheGeekFind/items

LOTR by Jimmy Cauty. Name of the Wind (title?) by Marc Simmonetti. Eddard Stark with Ice by Michael Komarck. The Gunslinger by Steve Stone. Dark Tower (title?) by David Finch.


Please identify the artists and spread the word. 374 products in their shop. I’m exhausted.

And so far I’ve notified:

David Finch
Mary GrandPre
John Howe
Michael Komarck
Jae Lee
Marc Simonetti
Chase Stone
Steve Stone

I messaged the shop owner, warned them about copyright, and as usual they seem clueless—or are at least feigning ignorance. I honestly don’t know how you can rip off such major talent and not realize what you’re doing.

Always fill out the form to officially record the complaint

If your art is being used without license on Etsy, make sure to complete an official copyright complaint on their form to take down the product.

https://www.etsy.com/legal/ip/report

I asked the legal department at Etsy to review the seller after they removed products violating Michael Whelan’s copyright because the seller was clearly stealing from many artists. Etsy said they needed IP owners (or their agents) to file separately.

This is pretty typical, shifting the burden to the offended parties. You’d think a comprehensive review of the seller would be part of every complaint that leads to product removal.

(via theartofmichaelwhelan)

    • #Michael Whelan
    • #copyright violation
  • 8 years ago > theartofmichaelwhelan
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theartofmichaelwhelan:

This rabbit hole goes deep. Tons of other artists ripped off in this Etsy shop: https://www.etsy.com/shop/TheGeekFind/items

LOTR by Jimmy Cauty. Name of the Wind (title?) by Marc Simmonetti. Eddard Stark with Ice by Michael Komarck. The Gunslinger by Steve Stone. Dark Tower (title?) by David Finch.


Please identify the artists and spread the word. 374 products in their shop. I’m exhausted.

And so far I’ve notified:

David Finch
Mary GrandPre
John Howe
Michael Komarck
Jae Lee
Marc Simonetti
Chase Stone
Steve Stone

I messaged the shop owner, warned them about copyright, and as usual they seem clueless—or are at least feigning ignorance. I honestly don’t know how you can rip off such major talent and not realize what you’re doing.

(via nightshaderose)

    • #Michael Whelan
    • #copyright violation
  • 8 years ago > theartofmichaelwhelan
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This rabbit hole goes deep. Tons of other artists ripped off in this Etsy shop: https://www.etsy.com/shop/TheGeekFind/items LOTR by Jimmy Cauty. Name of the Wind (title?) by Marc Simonetti. Eddard Stark with Ice by Michael Komarck. The Gunslinger by Steve Stone. Dark Tower (title?) by David Finch. Please identify the artists and spread the word. 374 products in their shop. I’m exhausted.

    • #Michael Whelan
    • #copyright violation
  • 8 years ago
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Blurring the line of copyright infringement?

I’ve spent the last week dealing with Etsy shop owners (among others) using the symbol Michael Whelan created for THE DARK TOWER: KA pictured above. At times, it has been a surreal experience and perhaps that’s why it makes for a great teaching moment.

Origin of the symbol

Most shop owners don’t understand where the KA symbol came from in the first place. The symbol, of course, was first seen in the Donald M. Grant hardcover editions of THE DARK TOWER (book 7) written by Stephen King.

Michael rendered the stylized letters K and A inside an uneven circle set on an abstract red background. The image was ultimately printed in black and white as interior illustration. (Page 326 in the DMG Artist Edition)

If you look at the front of the book, the copyright statement is clear. Illustrations © 2004 by Michael Whelan. So why all the confusion?

From fan art to copyright infringement

Somewhere along the line, a fan reproduced the symbol and began sharing it. Others embellished on it, adding a bird or a 19 to the design. But it’s all the same symbol despite the variations.

Intellectual ownership was confused by lack of artist attributions, which is all too common on the internet. That’s why we discourage alteration of Michael’s images and insist on credit when his art is posted under fair use. Despite our best efforts, the symbol keeps appearing on merchandise (t-shirts, mugs, decals).

Believe me, I understand the draw of merchandising in fandom. KA is a powerful symbol, a visual shortcut to a great series of books. The problem is that none of this usage was authorized or licensed by the artist.

Obscurring ownership doesn’t change ownership

The funny thing is a lot of shop owners think the KA symbol was created by Stephen King. Even if that were the case, wouldn’t King hold the copyright? Why does this somehow make it okay to exploit the symbol for commercial use? It makes no sense, but that’s how many respond to takedown requests, with rationalizations intended to obscure ownership of the image. Because without clear ownership, they can do whatever they want, right?

I’m sure some do it to cover up their ignorance regarding copyright while others cling to any excuse to continue profiting off off something they didn’t create. In the end, it’s all still a violation of copyright.

Substantial similarity

But what if I hand draw the symbol? What if I make alterations to the design? What if I change the color?

I kid you not, I’ve heard all of these questions from sellers trying to drag out their unlicensed use the image.

There are great resources out there on copyright. I found this article from the Graphic Designer’s Guild which I find useful in defining “substantial similarity” which is what we’re talking about here.

No, it’s not okay to copy an artist, whether you’re tracing or blatantly ripping off the idea behind the work. Copyright covers both the concept and the rendering of the art.

When an artist notifies you of copyright infringement, just stop. Take the product down.

So who is to blame? The seller of the platform?

To be clear, the immediate legal burden falls on the seller. By declaring they have a right to reproduce the image—which pretty much every site on the planet requires—the seller assumes responsibility.

The problem is there are never consequences in place to stop them from lying. But threats abound for filing false copyright complaints. Ironic, huh?

Most commercial platforms skirt liability with legal boilerplate. Check this box to state you own the image. Worse, they shift the burden both ways, first to the seller then to the owner of the image by requiring artists to file complaints to defend their work, a complicated process that further eats away at the artist’s time, adding insult to injury.

And then what? Artists wait for days, sometimes even weeks to have unlicensed work pulled down. More often than not, the ads and products go right back up in an act of willful infringement.

It takes a ridiculous amount of time and energy to get the platform to do anything about repetitious infringement, but clearly it’s their responsibility once the issue is reported.

Social media sites have to do better at this.

Clearly Facebook knows they have a problem with fan pages violating copyright for commercial gain. By taking ad money, they have a clear legal responsibility to penalize users who abuse their platform, right? RIGHT?!? So why is it so easy to run those ads again?

Commerce platforms and on-demand printers have an even greater legal responsibility. They MUST find better ways to penalize shop owners who violate terms of service and intellectual property policies.

Simpy taking products down doesn’t make the issue right with the owner of the image. The offending party likely has been paid while the artist is out time and energy that could have been better spent creatively.

Protect artists’ time and energy

That’s essentially is what this is about. We want artists to create work that we love. So lets stop stressing them out tracking down theft of their work. Lets make the system work for them instead of penalizing them for creating something.

    • #Michael Whelan
    • #copyright violation
  • 8 years ago
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patricjreynolds-blog:
“ esther-viola:
“ theartofmichaelwhelan:
“ Before you buy that shirt… We have been experiencing a serious uptick in copyright violations recently, specifically in advertisements from “Fans of…” Facebook pages.
In the past couple...
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patricjreynolds-blog:

esther-viola:

theartofmichaelwhelan:

Before you buy that shirt…

We have been experiencing a serious uptick in copyright violations recently, specifically in advertisements from “Fans of…” Facebook pages.

In the past couple of weeks, I’ve been playing whack-a-mole with a Dark Tower “community” that has been ripping off Michael Whelan’s KA symbol. I suspect this is the same group of thieves I had banned from Facebook last year for rampant copyright violation.

The ads in question are for t-shirts, mugs, etc printed almost exclusively through Teechip, a campaign driven t-shirt printer that has a disturbing number of alternatively branded websites out there.

If you see a Michael Whelan product that doesn’t look legitimate, please let us know and we can confirm whether the product has been properly licensed. We have a lot of fans doing this already and the extra eyes help enormously.

Was your artwork ripped off?

If you are an artist with a similar experience, please reach out and share the details of the copyright infringement.

I’m trying to open a dialogue with Facebook’s intellectual property department to see if we can find a better way to protect artist rights on social media. The more evidence I have, the easier it will be to get their attention.

This is something I’m doing on my own time as a fan, and I’m happy to share my experience to help others navigate the process.

Signal boost please. Thank you!

Mike Jackson
webmaster@michaelwhelan.com

P.S. If you see a cool shirt out there, find out who the artist is. Then you can make sure you’re supporting their work.

Since some of my designs have been stolen (in the past, not at the moment <- that I know of), I’m reblogging this. 

I know there are also a lot of Supernatural fan pages on Facebook who are ripping off designs on Teechip and similar sites. 

In 2011, I drew a “Iron Giant” commission for a client and posted it on my website.  Last year, a very vigilant friend noticed that someone had swiped the image, pasted it on a t-shirt, and tried to sell it on TeeChip.  My art rep and I alerted TeeChip of the infringement, but due to their rather fussy “Take Down Request” procedure and slow response rate, it took them 3 weeks to actually remove it from their site.  Thanks for taking charge on this, Mike!

Always happy to fight the good fight. 3 weeks is horrible response time on a DMCA request. It should take less than a day, but I’ve heard 3 weeks quoted by too many of the artists who have reached out to us.

That’s why it’s really important for artists and writers with large audiences to get behind this on behalf of others who don’t have such an influential platform. For example…

Yesterday, Stephen King’s Facebook page which has about 5 million followers addressed the issue. Many of those “fans of” pages are now banned thanks to SK’s pull with FB.

Huge tip of the hat to Jordan at StephenKing.com for amplifying this conversation. ~MJ

(via patricjreynolds-blog)

    • #Michael Whelan
    • #copyright violation
    • #Stephen King
  • 8 years ago > theartofmichaelwhelan
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Fine artist of Imaginative Realism and illustrator of science fiction and fantasy. Winner of 15 Hugo Awards (SF's Oscar). Inducted into the Science Fiction Hall of Fame in 2009.

Michael Whelan.com


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