Avoiding Copyright Infringement
Posted: Tue Apr 22, 2014 3:57 pm
I recently had a debacle with this and wanted to share some thoughts regarding avoiding copyright infringement.
None of the information below constitutes legal advice. I recommend consulting an attorney before acting on any of this information.
1. If an image/video/sound is not explicitly stated as being under the creative commons license or being able to use with/without attribution, then assume it's copyrighted. Although the majority of people may not hunt you down and sue you for using it in your video or campaign, there are people out there that will (no cease and desist letter - just send you an invoice and demand ridiculously high payment or legal action).
2. If you are going to include a copyrighted work in your image/video, be sure to get written permission from the creator or don't risk using it.
3. Even if you attribute the copyrighted work with a link/name, unless you have written permission from the creator, you are still infringing on their copyright.
4. Just because you don't get caught now, doesn't mean you can't get caught later. If you have a wildly successful campaign, it will put an extra high-intensity lens on your activities and information in your campaign page/video. You can still be sued from a campaign done months and months ago.
5. This information applies to any blogs or social media profiles you are running during the campaign.
Resources for free images:
- http://sourcedigit.com/2773-top-5-place ... rcial-use/
- Creative Commons License: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/
Resources for free video stock:
http://www.hongkiat.com/blog/download-f ... eo-intros/
http://www.premiumbeat.com/blog/20-free ... deo-sites/
Stories about what can happen:
http://www.contentfac.com/copyright-inf ... are-scary/
http://www.blogher.com/bloggers-beware- ... y?page=0,1
Has copyright infringement been a concern for you? What do you think?
None of the information below constitutes legal advice. I recommend consulting an attorney before acting on any of this information.
1. If an image/video/sound is not explicitly stated as being under the creative commons license or being able to use with/without attribution, then assume it's copyrighted. Although the majority of people may not hunt you down and sue you for using it in your video or campaign, there are people out there that will (no cease and desist letter - just send you an invoice and demand ridiculously high payment or legal action).
2. If you are going to include a copyrighted work in your image/video, be sure to get written permission from the creator or don't risk using it.
3. Even if you attribute the copyrighted work with a link/name, unless you have written permission from the creator, you are still infringing on their copyright.
4. Just because you don't get caught now, doesn't mean you can't get caught later. If you have a wildly successful campaign, it will put an extra high-intensity lens on your activities and information in your campaign page/video. You can still be sued from a campaign done months and months ago.
5. This information applies to any blogs or social media profiles you are running during the campaign.
Resources for free images:
- http://sourcedigit.com/2773-top-5-place ... rcial-use/
- Creative Commons License: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/
Resources for free video stock:
http://www.hongkiat.com/blog/download-f ... eo-intros/
http://www.premiumbeat.com/blog/20-free ... deo-sites/
Stories about what can happen:
http://www.contentfac.com/copyright-inf ... are-scary/
http://www.blogher.com/bloggers-beware- ... y?page=0,1
Has copyright infringement been a concern for you? What do you think?