Most don't know shit about copyright either, cause OOP has a case, assuming they used their own meme template.
The entire meme economy is technically one big copyright violation, which just shows how utterly broken current copyright law is. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1Jwo5qc78QU
True, but you need to go out of your ways to do it instead of see it on each page. Also the count is a bit different in each server instance, as federation is not completely accurate.
Hello, I'm on a throwaway account because I already confronted the reposter on my main account.
Backstory: I recently posted a meme, and it only got 50 upvotes. Someone stole my meme and and got over 20,000 upvotes.
I was literally heartbroken and cried. I told the reposter to give me credit, but he made fun of me instead. I know suing someone over a meme sounds silly, but it's not about the meme. it's about justice. I'm planning on contacting a lawyer, but I wanna get advice here to see what I can do. So what can I do? I wanna take this to a civil court. Will a judge take it?
Karmacourt always looked like a lot of effort without much entertainment. I think it was put together by those kids that read and reenacted Roberts Rules of Order for fun. Aka the student government.
Why is this funny? Thinking on it, shouldn't copying someone's created content be actionable on the social platform at the very least?
We are getting so used to people stealing content that it is just become the rule of the land, but imagine creating a painting or writing a book then someone copies it and sells it claiming it's theirs.