View allAll Photos Tagged THEFT
Stealing photos is wrong, and I find my photos lifted a LOT. The above is from a website; it sure looks amazingly like my shot flic.kr/p/2fVXr8H
For Flickr Pro members, you have access to Pixsy to help find these. Last year Pixsy found my photos for sale on Adobe Stock!
I agreed to let their lawyers go after the case, and Pixsy failed. Someone by the name of Otman had lifted my photos, uploaded to Adobe Stock, and was actively selling them. Pixsy was unable to do anything. An obvious case of theft; Adobe and the seller Otman were profiting from my work!
I was able to send Adobe a takedown notice and had my photos removed. But they still kept the profits they made with Otman. Sadly it's a Whac-A-Mole as a new Otman will create a new account and is back in business making money for the thief and Adobe (or wherever else they are selling them)
Yes, I could watermark my images, but that would take away from their beauty. And anyone with Photoshop skills can remove most watermarks pretty easily.
Comments are open if you have any thoughts........
Gulls are notorious for attempted thievery which provides terrific photo opportunities!
Forsythe NWR, Oceanville, New Jersey
For my friend Eleni.
See her photos here: www.flickr.com/photos/enorasis/
My granddaughter. She will be two years old in October.
Luck and coincidence.
Artwork by Alex Senna.
londoncallingblog.net/2017/04/08/new-alex-senna-street-ar...
Some Flickr user named S. Sinclair has been ripping my pix off regularly - I have filed 4 Flickr DMCAs already and she slaps it back up on her feed. She claims she "found it on internet" - "She looked at my feed and I was obviously incapable of producing this work - and today claims I must have ripped it off as was too good for SL. My pix is my own and obviously older than her rip - Also I have other pix in same outfit in my feed. And I am wearing on my neck an item produced in SL I blogged for Eclipse Event. I dunno some days it just gets old...
Thank you Daisie for pointing this out to me
My Pix: www.flickr.com/photos/57752611@N04/40871627373/in/photoli...
www.flickr.com/photos/57752611@N04/48541237347/in/photoli...
www.flickr.com/photos/57752611@N04/43868858724/in/photoli...
Thank you for your interest. Please do not post spam, irrelevant poetry or prose, or links to your works in the comment section. I will find my own way to your images. All my images are my own original work, under my copyright, with all rights reserved. This means the owner's permission must be sought and obtained, before using any image for ANY purpose.
Copyright infringement is theft.
Contemplating Theft
Juvenile eagle attempting to steal a meal from an adult eagle over the Susquehanna River
2019_11_04_EOS 7D Mark II_3972-Edit_V1
volunteer day at the shelter "I'm on the hunt for better food and went into another cat's cage to find it"
Tus jam 4, Shine Quest Tcow Drift27 and Amuk. Stockwell 2009.
joiner to follow soon.
We deciced to mix things up alittle bit on this jam by seperating the tus into 2 teams, 1st team was tus south located at stockwell and second team was tus east/essex located at lakeside.
on the morning of the jam the banter began as team south and team east set out to battle.with each team not knowing what each of there themes would be.
Firstly i would like to thank brave and fugi for being the only members from 5 that could make this jam poss, great job fellas and great wall.
secondly a big thanks to my guys with me on team south wall, we worked tiredlessly for 8 hours to get this production done.tcow a great theme from you keep the ideas rolling.
lastly we are glad to announce amuk as our new member, a great talent and we are all glad to have him on board.
shine
Dozens of Bald Eagles in several brief, intense periods on a recent morning were flying from shore at various angles to a small commercial fishing boat that was tossing unwanted fish back into the water for them. Concurrently, many eagles were flying back to shore at various angles either with their prize or in frustrated failure. There were numerous incidents in which an eagle returning to shore to eat its fish was attacked by another eagle trying to force, in football jargon, a fumble of the fish back into the water. I saw multiple fish dropped and scooped up by the aggressor.
In this picture (pic #1) a bigger female is positioned to strip a fish out of the talons of what seems to be a smaller male. The male is giving her a head fake (also sports jargon) to make her think that he is going behind her. Instead he veered in front of her and they seemed to touch. But he managed to escape with the fish and vocalized in triumph (Pic #2). As he flew off, he tucked in the fish better to risk avert against another thief flying from shore to intercept him.
It was interesting to see some veterans of this kind of activity protect their fish by flying very low over the lake and land to reduce the number of possible angles of attack.
Eagles seem to think it is easier to take someone else's meal rather than find their own. Here two fight over a midshipman fish.
Once there was a 3-4cm caterpillar. Came a parasitic wasp and laid eggs into the caterpillar, they hatched and munched the caterpillar from the inside and pupated on the outside and left their cocoons. The caterpillar shrivelled but its hairs are still standing upright, must indeed have been a hair raising experience.....
Oh and that ant is dead, maybe killed by the first wasp to come out...
The ever-opportunistic gull swept in to try to steal the catfish from the Red-breasted Merganser. Unfortunately, during its escape the merganser dropped the fish and the gull failed to retrieve it.
Grand Theft Auto V
• Custom Resolution
• Rockstar Editor (Post Processing Filter´s)
Adult Bald Eagles (Haliaeetus leucocephalus)
Conowingo Dam, Darlington, Maryland
... to catch a fish, or just steal one ...
www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Bald_Eagle/id
ORDER: Accipitriformes
FAMILY: Accipitridae
Note: Entered into but did not place in the Conowingo 2019 eagle photo contest www.facebook.com/1458303737739233/photos/a.20282033740825...
Friends at a wedding.
Shot with a Nikon D7000 and a Nikkor AFS DX 18-200mm F/3.5-5.6G lens, with lighting from a ceiling-bounced Nikon SB-600, and processed in GIMP and Photoscape.
Chain your leg to the tire, works every time. Unless of course someone wants your bike bad enough to cut your leg off.