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10 Signs of Gaslighting in an Abusive Relationship
To gaslight someone is to manipulate them into questioning their own sanity. This is seen in abusive relationships and, even after the relationship ends, the effects of gaslighting can still progress. This is why it is important to identify such a relationship as soon as possible and remove gaslighters from your life, and keep them away from contact for at least a year if not permanently. It is a form of emotional abuse that gives the abuser power by making the victim question their own mentalities.
1. Your Fears Are Used Against You
Abusive people are often charming in order to extract information from you and use it against you later on. They take note of your vulnerabilities especially for this reason. The abuser will want toâŚ
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Copyright infringement by KOHLâS
By now you may have seen all the internet publicity around Tuesday Bassenâs and other independent artistsâ works being ripped off by major fashion retailer, Zara.Â
I have been dealing with a lot of copyright infringement over the past few years and it has been no fun at all. I have seen unauthorized copies of my work all over the place including on Amazon, Etsy, clip art sites, T-shirt vendors like Sunfrog and Teespring⌠and so far I have been successful in getting these images taken down fairly quickly.
A few months ago, a friend noticed this kidâs shirt at kohls.comÂ
The boston terrier images on the t-shirt are badly traced copies of my Boogie Doggie Language drawings. Small details like eyes and ears have been changed, bow ties and glasses have been added, and most of the images are flipped. (Examples below have been re-flipped to clarify the similarities)
According to my attorney, the legal team at Iconix (the parent company of Mudd) does not believe there is any copyright infringement. They are refusing to take any action or compensate me in any way without a lawsuit. If I want them to stop selling this t-shirt or to get any money back from their sales, I have to sue them.
Litigation may not be a big deal to a large company like Iconix/Mudd; but it would be ridiculously expensive for a solo artist like me. Costs could go up to $60K if the case goes all the way to trial.
I cannot claim statutory damages ($150K per infringing item) because my copyright registration was not completed within 3 months of when Doggie Language was first published.Â
If I win the case, I will recoup revenue from Muddâs sales and my attorney fees, but this may not be enough to cover all the other thousands of dollars worth of court fees including expert witness fees. I basically have to pay out of pocket if I want to sue.Â
Many friends and supporters have suggested a GoFundMe campaign to raise money for a lawsuit. I am very touched by the offer but I have to say I feel uncomfortable about taking money from other people.Â
I already had in mind a crowdfunding campaign for my Dogs of The World book project later this year or next year, and if I were to request donations now to cover legal fees, I feel that I would be overimposing on people by asking for money twice and I donât feel good about this. I would rather that people donate to my creative projects than fight this stupid expensive battle to prove that the copied images are mine.
Also - I worry about not raising enough money or not achieving the resolution that all my contributors are hoping for. Taking money from other people = extra pressure.Â
I have not yet decided what I am going to do; these are just some of the concerns I have right now.
For now, this is HOW YOU CAN HELP:
1. Please SHARE this information. Tell people about this bootleg t-shirt at Kohlâs and Muddâs response, and spread awareness about the larger issue of fashion retailers stealing and profiting from indie artists and getting away with it. Use Facebook, Twitter, and other social media.
(my original tweet here and my facebook post here) 2. Boycott these companies. Write to these companies to let them know you will not buy from them. Pressure Kohlâs to sever their relationship with Mudd/Iconix.
Twitter - @kohls @muddstyleâ @iconix
https://www.iconixbrand.com/connect/
3. Buy directly from artists if you can. I am going to be making a similar Boston Terrier shirt available soon, for anyone who is interested.
4. If you are purchasing artwork online (like stock images, clip art etc), check the source carefully. I have seen copies of my artwork on sites like istockphoto and freepik and had to have them taken down. Â If you are a vendor/designer who buys stock imagery from these sites, be aware that ANYONE can upload images to these licensing agencies/libraries and lie that the work is theirs. (yes, it sucks)
IF YOU ARE AN ARTIST or DESIGNER: 1. Learn from my mistakes. When you create new artwork, register your copyright within 90 days of publication. You can do this online.
Without copyright registration you have no leverage in court, and an attorney is less likely to work on contingency. Here is an illustrated summary of how copyright registration protects you.
I did not know about the 90-day registration window and I donât think many people do. If you registered within the 90 day period, and if your copyrights are violated, you can collect statutory damages in court ($150K per item)  regardless of whether the infringing party made any money from your work. If your copyright registration is too late (as mine was for Doggie Language), you can only recover their profits & your attorneyâs fees - and this may or may not be enough to cover all other expensive court fees. If the infringing party can prove that they made no money from sales, then the artist gets nothing.
2. When you look to other artistsâ works for inspiration (as we all do and this is normal), make sure that what you create is not a recognizable copy of what you are looking at. Tracing someone elseâs work, changing colors or a few details here and there, or flipping the image 180 degrees is STILL plagiarism and copyright infringement. Another example is taking the âheadâ from someoneâs drawing of a dog, and sticking it on a different body - this is STILL copyright infringement.
I want to say thank you again to everyone who is supporting me. There are times I find myself feeling depressed, insignificant, and powerless, and your passionate support really helps! Thank you for standing by me!
Also thank you to:
- Robynne Raye for her help and advice. Details about Robynneâs/Modern Dogâs copyright infringement case against Target and Disney HERE and HERE. They won!
- Megan Wilson for organizing this petition: https://www.change.org/p/mudd-stop-stealing-the-work-of-independent-artists Please sign if you can.
- Lili
7/24/2016 UPDATE
THANK YOU TO EVERYONE for the signatures, reposts and retweets! There is power and justice with social media group effort: Kohlâs has removed the shirt from their website!!! We have yet to check if the shirt has been removed from physical stores. No response from Mudd/Iconix, but this is a big step!
8/8/2016 UPDATE
Kohlâs now claims the shirt design is not infringement (their âdesign teamâ created it) and they are going to continue selling the shirt.
It appears that another item in the Kohlâs catalog has an unauthorized copy of my Boogie design on it. Sonoma is a Kohlâs in-house brand. These socks are selling in their stores and on their website.
This boston terrier is lifted from the SAME âDoggie Languageâ poster probably by their same in-house âdesignerâ. And they are still denying copyright infringement and are refusing to stop selling these products!Â
#boycottkohls
PLEASE READ and SHARE MY NEW BLOG POST about Derivative Works  here: http://blog.doggiedrawings.net/post/148161295271
And this is as good a reason as any why so many artists might never ever share their art online again. Companies who allow their in-house designers to just rip off and âchangeâ art they found on the Internet are LOW. The majority of the designers are freelance, it would take little effort to just hire the artists who CREATED THE CONTENT in the first place. Likewise, company designers who have zero qualms in ripping off the work of a fellow artist: take a long hard look at your life and ask, what if it happened to you? Itâs sadly a horrible Catch-22. People absolutely DO get hired for jobs like this based on their online art posts, itâs happened for me quite a few times, now. But post your art online, thereâs the awful risk of mass reposting-without-credit, etsy theft or wholesale corporate plagiarism as seen here. I wish I could give a safe answer. All I have is: watermark everything CLEARLY with a portfolio URL or an email address.