Businesses and Non-Profits—Beware! Trolling Photography Lawyers Are Attacking!

July 15, 2024

By Mike DuBose

A photographer was recently awarded $6 million after a jury found a non-profit guilty of using his copyrighted pictures without permission. A Prosperity, SC church was sued by a New Hampshire photographer for their posting his photographs of mountain scenes on their website’s sermons. A business colleague was blindsided Christmas with $70,000 lawsuit summons by North Carolina lawyers representing a photographer for unauthorized use of photos licensed 20 years ago! Likewise, two of our companies were sued when staff unknowingly utilized pictures from the public Internet without any copyright/ownership markings.

While most attorneys (and photographers) are professionals who adhere to legal and ethical standards, research refers to the unethical as “trolling lawyers” who have sold their souls for money. In fact, during depositions, a photographer, who was also an attorney, admitted taking hundreds of photographs and registered them with the copyright office. He intentionally dumped them without copyright or ownership markings into the public Internet domain to lure unsuspecting victims into using them—then sued everyone! In sworn affidavits, he reported making $400,000 annually from “easy prey!”

To defend yourself against these evil attacks, here are how the copyright schemes work:

Step 1: Unethical photographers, who have registered their work with the US Copyright Office, engage with  “trolling law firms.” The parties agree to share the profits of any legal actions that the attorney extort from the innocent through threatening letters or lawsuits.

Step 2: Trolling lawyers use highly-sophisticated software to search the Internet for pictures that match images photographers registered with the copyright office.

Step 3: If images are suspect, “demand letters” will be sent to the organizational leaders or individuals notifying that they and/or third-parties are using unauthorized photographs and huge payments are required. The trollers require  names of your insurance companies since they know insurers will settle and score quick money strikes! The letter warns recipients that if they don’t respond by certain dates, further legal action will be implemented. Initially explore communications to detect fraudsters, but if the letters appear legitimate, treat them as an urgent threat.

Step 4: If you don’t reply, lawsuits will be filed and your attorney must communicate in thirty days. The trolling law firm will continue to threaten you to “Pay up!” even if you didn’t intentionally and knowingly use the photographs and have removed the images. Forgiveness and being reasonable or sensible are not their endgame! Most parties being attacked settle out of court with the hoodlums.

In our friend’s case, she knew the lawsuit was frivolous and vigorously fought the adverse attack. This led to tremendous amounts of wasted time, stress, and meetings over a year between lawyers, insurance agents, litigators, and clients. The sad result was the victim paid $25,000 in legal fees to her copyright attorney and the insurance company settled for $20,000 to the photographer for the bogus two-picture claims.

How can individuals, non-profits, or businesses reduce threats? Scott Mosely with Irmo Insurance recommends “families purchase $1 million liability add-on to their home/auto policy which costs about $150 annually. It covers against a wide-range of threats since you can be sued for anything!” One hundred million lawsuits were filed in federal courts during 2023! Businesses and non-profits should buy additional “Cyber Insurance” to address intellectual property breaches. This includes protections for websites, social media, and marketing materials. The coverage will address many infringements such as the American Disabilities Act, HIPAA privacy laws, copyrights, photos, and content. Umbrella business and other liability coverage, while definitely needed, may not address all intellectual property libelous issues. Ensure staff and contractors, like web designers, avoid using Internet photographs without written permission. Take your own snapshots or secure low-cost stock photos from reputable companies like www.shutterstock.com. Carefully examine your on-line presence to ensure there aren’t potential copyright hazards lurking.

Attorney Thomas Moses with Southeast IP Group (www.seiplaw.com) who has defended hundreds of clients against copyright and trademark violations recommends: “engage with lawyers who are well-versed in copyright and trademark laws since threatening attorneys have advanced experience and knowledge in copyright lawsuits. If there’s evidence photos are copyrighted, remove them and contact your insurance company and lawyer.

“Hope for the best and plan for the worse!” Conniving thieves are very crafty “making a quick buck.” You might be next!

 

Contact Mike at [email protected]. Visit his nonprofit website www.mikedubose.com and register to receive his monthly articles or Daily Thoughts plus free access to his books, including “The Art of Building Great Businesses.” The website includes 100+ published articles he has written on business, travel, and personal topics, in addition to health research with Surb Guram, MD and David Hurst, DMV.