Dallas family sues Virgin Mobile over ad:
The lawsuit names Virgin Mobile USA, its Australian counterpart, and Creative Commons Corp., a Massachusetts nonprofit that licenses sharing of Flickr photos, as defendants.The picture of 16-year-old Chang flashing a peace sign was taken at an April church carwash by Alison's youth counselor, who posted it on his Flickr page, according to Alison's brother, Damon. In the ad, Virgin Mobile printed one of its campaign slogans, "Dump your pen friend," over the picture.
The ad also says "Free text virgin to virgin" at the bottom.
The experience damaged Alison's reputation and exposed her to ridicule from her peers and scrutiny from people who can now Google her, the family charged in the lawsuit.
"It's the tag line; it's derogatory," said Damon Chang, 27. "A lot of her church friends saw it."
Ok, forget for a moment that Damon seems to think a headline is a tagline, the creative commons licence used simply asks for attribution, which the ad has in regards to the photo. They forgot that models used in advertising must sign a release as well.
You can see the Virgin Flickr photo poster ad here, and the discussion underneath that seems to be where Alison Chang found out that she was the model of an advertising campaign, and the original flickr photo is here which also has some heated comments. Love the off the chart ones like "and lastly, if you don't trust your friends to use the proper restrictions on photos of you, then don't pose for photos for them".. Yeah, uh, that'll help. There are already laws and rules in place, lets just quit breaking them shall we? How's that for an idea?
In the Flickr discussion forums, a thread called Virgin Mobile advertising campaign using Flickr photos already back the 29th of June. See Duncans TV adland for more images of posters in the campaign itself. It's hit all the major papers in Australia including The Age. In each article Damon Chang points to the 'derogatory' line as a reason to sue, which I'm fairly sure is some sort of journalistic misquote to hang the story on. Lets just get the idea properly explained shall we? The V-sign happy gal has dumped her pen friend because she can now text friends for free. Got it? There's the funny. Pen friend is now phone friend. Hardy-har-har. Still, Virgin should have had a model release anyway and should get sued for that alone - not for any perceived derogatoryness-ness. Bah, you know what I mean.
Just to get the ball rolling, here are a few blog posts on this campaign.
Virgin Mobile Australia and their PR mistake, Virgin Mobile: Did You Forget Something?, Flickr Photos Used by Virgin Mobile and Virgin Mobile Botches Creative Commons-Driven Ad Campaign.
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PermalinkAlso, this one is particularly funny/ironic.
The Elevator shot on Flickr. Molly (on the right mid-yakity-yak) is talking to a Yahoo Big Kahuna (head of Web Development for Yahoo! Europe ). Yahoo owns Flickr. Nice twist!
virginmobilebadbreath.jpg
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PermalinkI like the way the agnecy removed the Adidas logo from Alison's cap. So maybe after she's finished milking Virgin for her college fund, she might even try at getting a sports scholarship from Adidas.
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PermalinkDon't get me started on rights and rules in photography. Here in the US, especially, there has been a serious problem with willful ignorance of the golden rule. If someone ripped of an ad Host (the agency) made, think they wouldn't sue?Respect by and for creatives, across discipline and within, really needs a boost, I think. Then issues like this wouldn't come up--pros would work with pros instead of trying to do everything as cheaply as possible.
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PermalinkOh, barely had time to post this before this was emailed in:
Similar statement is in the first article linked to in my post above;
For the record, global brands making global goodwill mistakes will get globally burned.
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PermalinkAnother post on this story Courts will decide whether you have the rights to your personal image
- in the comments there I found this (legal) headache of a global mess. Welcome to teh intarwebs!
I'm curious about the outcome of this one, for example if they find the photographer at fault for 'releasing' images without proper model releases, will that kill CC licenses for images containing people? What happens when trademarks (think: Times Square) is involved in a CC-licensed shot and used in a major advertising campaign in the US, and a trademark owners gets peeved and hires lawyers? tricky.
Oh, IANAL.
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PermalinkA very belated update, Chang's case was dismissed, you can read more on such cases of using likeness here:
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PermalinkHi all, I just wanted to say thank you for explaining all of this so well!
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