Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Please. PP is purchasing a print. She's not reselling copies. It's no different from ordering the digital download. These are high volume, low quality assembly-line operations that charge $30 for a class photo.
No what PP is suggesting is illegal. The photographer will give release when they sell the CD (which is why it's always higher). Imagine if everyone cheated like you suggest and only ordered one 8x10 and made copies. I hope you don't teach your kid those morals.
So is it OK for 1 parent to buy the class picture and make copies for everyone in the class?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Please. PP is purchasing a print. She's not reselling copies. It's no different from ordering the digital download. These are high volume, low quality assembly-line operations that charge $30 for a class photo.
No what PP is suggesting is illegal. The photographer will give release when they sell the CD (which is why it's always higher). Imagine if everyone cheated like you suggest and only ordered one 8x10 and made copies. I hope you don't teach your kid those morals.
NP here (and an IP lawyer and not a cheater): if everyone cheated maybe finally schools would go back and do like when I was younger, just one class photograph at a very reasonable price (something like $8-$10), taken with little disruption to the school day (and usually done at the end of the year when we were not doing much in class anyway). I find outrageous that private companies have access to public schools and disrupt the school day to take photographs of every single kid in each class in addition to the class photo, and then offer packages that start at tens of dollars. Parents who want personal photographs of their kids to give to relatives and friends can take them to a photographer.
So you are an attorney and you're advocating breaking the law? Wonder where attorneys get their reputation?
Fwiw when I was young there were packages for individual pics as well as class photo both in fall and again in spring. I even had yearbook in elementary using fall photos. I was born in 1981.
Simmer down Nellie. PP wasn't advocating for violating anyone's copyright, merely offering an observation. This seems to have struck a nerve. You're not a professional photog by any chance? If so, I hope you don't do cookie cutter headshots.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Please. PP is purchasing a print. She's not reselling copies. It's no different from ordering the digital download. These are high volume, low quality assembly-line operations that charge $30 for a class photo.
No what PP is suggesting is illegal. The photographer will give release when they sell the CD (which is why it's always higher). Imagine if everyone cheated like you suggest and only ordered one 8x10 and made copies. I hope you don't teach your kid those morals.
NP here (and an IP lawyer and not a cheater): if everyone cheated maybe finally schools would go back and do like when I was younger, just one class photograph at a very reasonable price (something like $8-$10), taken with little disruption to the school day (and usually done at the end of the year when we were not doing much in class anyway). I find outrageous that private companies have access to public schools and disrupt the school day to take photographs of every single kid in each class in addition to the class photo, and then offer packages that start at tens of dollars. Parents who want personal photographs of their kids to give to relatives and friends can take them to a photographer.
So you are an attorney and you're advocating breaking the law? Wonder where attorneys get their reputation?
Fwiw when I was young there were packages for individual pics as well as class photo both in fall and again in spring. I even had yearbook in elementary using fall photos. I was born in 1981.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Please. PP is purchasing a print. She's not reselling copies. It's no different from ordering the digital download. These are high volume, low quality assembly-line operations that charge $30 for a class photo.
No what PP is suggesting is illegal. The photographer will give release when they sell the CD (which is why it's always higher). Imagine if everyone cheated like you suggest and only ordered one 8x10 and made copies. I hope you don't teach your kid those morals.
So is it OK for 1 parent to buy the class picture and make copies for everyone in the class?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Please. PP is purchasing a print. She's not reselling copies. It's no different from ordering the digital download. These are high volume, low quality assembly-line operations that charge $30 for a class photo.
No what PP is suggesting is illegal. The photographer will give release when they sell the CD (which is why it's always higher). Imagine if everyone cheated like you suggest and only ordered one 8x10 and made copies. I hope you don't teach your kid those morals.
Anonymous wrote:I order the image on cd, no prints.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Please. PP is purchasing a print. She's not reselling copies. It's no different from ordering the digital download. These are high volume, low quality assembly-line operations that charge $30 for a class photo.
No what PP is suggesting is illegal. The photographer will give release when they sell the CD (which is why it's always higher). Imagine if everyone cheated like you suggest and only ordered one 8x10 and made copies. I hope you don't teach your kid those morals.
NP here (and an IP lawyer and not a cheater): if everyone cheated maybe finally schools would go back and do like when I was younger, just one class photograph at a very reasonable price (something like $8-$10), taken with little disruption to the school day (and usually done at the end of the year when we were not doing much in class anyway). I find outrageous that private companies have access to public schools and disrupt the school day to take photographs of every single kid in each class in addition to the class photo, and then offer packages that start at tens of dollars. Parents who want personal photographs of their kids to give to relatives and friends can take them to a photographer.