Mascarpone Posted May 12, 2010 Share #1 Posted May 12, 2010 Advertisement (gone after registration) Most photographers just learn by coincidence that their images are used illegally. It's a shame because professional photographers and semi-pros need all the money they can get these days. There is a new service that automatically scans the internet and reports all findings weekly: https://www.imagerights.com/ Detective Happenstance can retire now... bad luck for people that use our photos without permission :-) Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Advertisement Posted May 12, 2010 Posted May 12, 2010 Hi Mascarpone, Take a look here How to find stolen photos on the web. I'm sure you'll find what you were looking for!
wildlightphoto Posted May 12, 2010 Share #2 Posted May 12, 2010 There's also TinEye Reverse Image Search Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mascarpone Posted May 12, 2010 Author Share #3 Posted May 12, 2010 The difference is that it works automatically and sends a report once a week. With Tineye you have to sit in front of the computer and work. I tried it. Results are pretty nice, they found several of my images in the first week. I think they concentrate a lot on media websites, corporate websites and blogs. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
farnz Posted May 12, 2010 Share #4 Posted May 12, 2010 I've used TinEye and it's very good (and free). I'm not convinced that ImageRights would earn its minimum $9.95 per month plus one-off $10 set-up fee so I wouldn't use it. YMMV. Pete. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
colin_d Posted May 17, 2010 Share #5 Posted May 17, 2010 Question slightly off track but related. If you post images on flickr does that make them available for public use? I notice there is a download function on flickr so I'm thinking anyone can use your shots without permission, but not sure. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
andybarton Posted May 17, 2010 Share #6 Posted May 17, 2010 You can turn off the download feature in Flickr, so that the only person who can download is you. Doesn't stop people doing a screen-grab though. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
santila Posted May 18, 2010 Share #7 Posted May 18, 2010 Advertisement (gone after registration) Doug, i did try your pointer and find many of my photos posted at my url on SmugMug but will it show if any photo was downloaded and where it was used. The biggest problem is even with the photo has watermark on it all over many lookers "screen-grab" and post them aon FB and other websites. Watermarking not hold the violators back. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
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