Beware the Copyleft Trolls

When photographers sue after Creative Commons Licenses go awry.

Chip Stewart
OneZero

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The scam works a little like this:

A photographer posts their work online under an outdated Creative Commons license, such as version 2.0, that does not give licensees the right to fix license problems within 30 days of notice, as do the current CC 4.0 licenses.

The photographers lurk until someone unwittingly posts the photograph online without proper attribution.

Then, they sue. And they sue. And they sue.

This is the topic of my most recent legal research paper, “Rise of the Copyleft Trolls: When Photographers Sue After Creative Commons Licenses Go Awry.” I’ll be presenting it in the Law & Policy Division of AEJMC at the virtual annual conference in August.

I became interested in this topic because it happened to me — or at least, to people I try to help, the students in the non-profit online news publication here at my university. A student posted a stock image from a German photographer named Marco Verch that was under a CC-BY (version 2.0) license. They used it as a thumbnail to link to a news story without the attribution. Months later, they got a demand letter requesting $750 to retroactively license the photo, ending with the line, “failure to resolve this matter of unlicensed use within 21 days will result in escalation to one of our partner attorneys for legal proceedings.”

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Chip Stewart
OneZero

Lawyer. Journalist. TCU professor. Viewer discretion is advised.