
However, the picture was picked up by department store Falabella and used in their own Internet advertising campaign. Torrealba contacted Derechos Digitales, who decided to help the designer enforce his work against the commercial use by drafting and sending a cease and desist letter. The missive was successful and Falabella has taken down the picture.
Congratulations to Claudio Ruiz and his team in CC-Chile for their work, which demonstrates that Creative Commons licences can be enforced in Civil Law systems. This also shows that a support system is required in order to properly enforce open licences, as evidenced by the power wielded by organisations such as GPL-violations.org. Chile is lucky to have an excellent team behind the licences, and similar support can be found throughout many jurisdictions.
Legal issues aside, am I the only person who thinks that the panda is particularly cool-looking? The Sex Pistols meets WWE meets Andy Warhol. Nice.
thanks for the comments, andrés!
ReplyDeleteThis is a very good news for the legal enforcement of CC. Maybe is not a jurisdictional victory, but at least demonstrate that CC is relevant and must be respected also by particular as enterprises.
And yeah, the panda is really good looking, maybe I will carry some stickers to Croatia ;)
Looking forward to that!
ReplyDelete