First HI to the forum and I can see that plenty of good advice travels around this site. I've been active about my issue with Pixsy since August on another forum and when I found Pixsy threads here, I wanted to post my tales of woe with this rogue brand.
Long story short: In August I got my first threat from Pixsy over a free image from Flickr under CC2.0 I used on my blog in 2022. I was unaware that free images needed attribution but that's irrelevant against the crap coming my way. They demanded £556 as a "license fee" and gave me 3 weeks to pay. I've gone to and fro since then and thus far, they have not stuck to their threatened deadlines. I explained how the matter was a moral rights issue and not infringement going by the Copyright Act 1988. No losses were incurred by the photographer - clearly a troll - as it's a free Flickr image. Plus Pixsy refuse to break down the costs and explain how they arrived at the fee. My site always looked like a commercial site but never was taking any business in content writing services. Just a front window. They claim I can't use the "fair use" rule for that but actually I can prove that the site never took any money. They even went to my Facebook page and quoted a line which looks business like. Okay, so what. Still irrelevant though as they've gone off on a tangent to avoid explaining how they arrived at the fee demanded and how it impacted the photographer financially, which it didn't of course. They do think that providing evidence of fees paid for licensed images to the photographer by various brands is relevant. How? The image I used is not in those lists and it's a free image. Flickr frown on it all and ended their Pixsy partnership in 2019. Creative Commons explicitly say in their rules that artists should contact anyone first and request a takedown and not use Pixsy services for financial gain. This all amazes me then as surely no cases should end up costing folks at the IPEC court at all. Pixsy offered a reduction to about £400, but I have stood my ground and repeated my reasons and request for justification of the fee demanded. Now I'm getting told that as I won't negotiate, they will escalate to IP lawyers.
I'm in a lot of debt and can't afford the fee if I chose to pay. I would hope that a court would consider that too.
So, anyone gone through/going through this debacle with Pixsy? What stage are you at and can any experts shed light on what to do next? I have reported the photographer to Flickr to investigate his trolling actions. I found his profile on LinkedIn. So I may get in touch with the rogue.
I see this not ending and despite Pixsy delays, it feels a tad more real now that they say it's getting "escalated" if I'm confirming that I won't negotiate.
Thanks in advance for any details from folks on how you handled/are handling your Pixsy case.
Long story short: In August I got my first threat from Pixsy over a free image from Flickr under CC2.0 I used on my blog in 2022. I was unaware that free images needed attribution but that's irrelevant against the crap coming my way. They demanded £556 as a "license fee" and gave me 3 weeks to pay. I've gone to and fro since then and thus far, they have not stuck to their threatened deadlines. I explained how the matter was a moral rights issue and not infringement going by the Copyright Act 1988. No losses were incurred by the photographer - clearly a troll - as it's a free Flickr image. Plus Pixsy refuse to break down the costs and explain how they arrived at the fee. My site always looked like a commercial site but never was taking any business in content writing services. Just a front window. They claim I can't use the "fair use" rule for that but actually I can prove that the site never took any money. They even went to my Facebook page and quoted a line which looks business like. Okay, so what. Still irrelevant though as they've gone off on a tangent to avoid explaining how they arrived at the fee demanded and how it impacted the photographer financially, which it didn't of course. They do think that providing evidence of fees paid for licensed images to the photographer by various brands is relevant. How? The image I used is not in those lists and it's a free image. Flickr frown on it all and ended their Pixsy partnership in 2019. Creative Commons explicitly say in their rules that artists should contact anyone first and request a takedown and not use Pixsy services for financial gain. This all amazes me then as surely no cases should end up costing folks at the IPEC court at all. Pixsy offered a reduction to about £400, but I have stood my ground and repeated my reasons and request for justification of the fee demanded. Now I'm getting told that as I won't negotiate, they will escalate to IP lawyers.
I'm in a lot of debt and can't afford the fee if I chose to pay. I would hope that a court would consider that too.
So, anyone gone through/going through this debacle with Pixsy? What stage are you at and can any experts shed light on what to do next? I have reported the photographer to Flickr to investigate his trolling actions. I found his profile on LinkedIn. So I may get in touch with the rogue.
I see this not ending and despite Pixsy delays, it feels a tad more real now that they say it's getting "escalated" if I'm confirming that I won't negotiate.
Thanks in advance for any details from folks on how you handled/are handling your Pixsy case.
Comment