Sure, but I'm talking about consumer products, not services. Services can be self-regulated via an industry ombudsman. Products not so much.
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Sure, but I'm talking about consumer products, not services. Services can be self-regulated via an industry ombudsman. Products not so much.
Okay. so I did my research on the juice discussed here and came in contact with the creator. The original designer is from Deviant Art who painted the image with brushed, stroke lines and pen-tooling. It was gifted to dota2wallpapers to be used with their own filter on top. Phantom, (the juice line in question) bought permission with a licensing fee from the designer as it worked out cheaper than a hired graphic designer.
So, I for once would like to state that Phantom went through all the right channels and procedures. As a graphic designer myself, I am also not supporting copying or piracy but as long as all the right procedures were followed, which its was, certain artwork can be used as long as the designer or company get compensation, which was done.
Okay. so I did my research on the juice discussed here and came in contact with the creator. The original designer is from Deviant Art who painted the image with brushed, stroke lines and pen-tooling. It was gifted to dota2wallpapers to be used with their own filter on top. Phantom, (the juice line in question) bought permission with a licensing fee from the designer as it worked out cheaper than a hired graphic designer.
So, I for once would like to state that Phantom went through all the right channels and procedures. As a graphic designer myself, I am also not supporting copying or piracy but as long as all the right procedures were followed, which its was, certain artwork can be used as long as the designer or company get compensation, which was done.
You can't "licence" IP for commercial purposes that doesn't belong to you even fan art. I can't go draw mickey mouse and make t-shirts, disney will have my balls on a fire in two seconds.
Okay. so I did my research on the juice discussed here and came in contact with the creator. The original designer is from Deviant Art who painted the image with brushed, stroke lines and pen-tooling. It was gifted to dota2wallpapers to be used with their own filter on top. Phantom, (the juice line in question) bought permission with a licensing fee from the designer as it worked out cheaper than a hired graphic designer.
So, I for once would like to state that Phantom went through all the right channels and procedures. As a graphic designer myself, I am also not supporting copying or piracy but as long as all the right procedures were followed, which its was, certain artwork can be used as long as the designer or company get compensation, which was done.
I am not associated with the creator in any way, just followed up on the matter because as I've stated before, I am a designer myself and therefore do not condone stealing images for profit by any means.
Formal permission was given to use the character as it promotes along their customer base who recognises where it initiates from, along with credits in Phantom's company information, which is established in memory of Phantom assassin which will be on the website once live.
Wait ,ok , so you're now saying valve gave permission for PA to be used on a vape juice label?
So who is the mystery creator then? I would like to contact him myself for all this authenticity.
Unless he is the original creator of the image, ie, the one that Dota used. Although highly doubtful, it is possible that Dota also bought the rights to the image from the same dude.
Your point holds valid though. Copy an paste, printing, tracing, drawing from memory are all still valid copyright infringements and unless the fan art is the point of origin, the guy who drew the fan art cannot give permission to use it or get paid for it, that will go into the realm of fraud, unless, of course, the fan art is the original image that Dota sourced.
It could have been fan-art originally, that was my point, and Valve either bought or got permission. Again highly unlikely. It could also be case of the creator on DevArt giving permission he is not allowed to, or this whole thing is actually legit.Here is the image as used by VALVE (certainly not fan-art) scroll down a page.
http://www.dota2.com/oracle/day2
It could have been fan-art originally, that was my point, and Valve either bought or got permission. Again highly unlikely. It could also be case of the creator on DevArt giving permission he is not allowed to, or this whole thing is actually legit.
Yep, I agree 100% with you.Sorry I meant to reply to another post but yes EXTREMELY unlikely since valve have a submission system for in game stuff via steam workshop, even then it becomes partly owned by valve. They hire a specific art team to keep anything else in line with their art style. The image in question was used for the launch of an in-game item that changes the default model's appearance, there would be no fan-art of something that had yet to exist. Most countries allow for fair use when something is derivative enough or used for satire/comedy, it's how people like threadless and other various print on demand shops get away with things.
YOU CAN NOT LEGALLY SELL OR LICENCE IMAGES OF IP TO WHICH YOU DO NOT OWN THE RIGHTS TO DO SO, fan art or otherwise, they usually let people sell once-offs etc because policing it would be alot more work than it is worth, but licensing some one to produce commercial products with an image of a character you do not own.
Besides the fact that this isnt fan-art, even if it was is completely irrelevant, you cant sell it, and it is up to the owner of a business to make sure of this either way.
If valve had licensed this, it would have blown up all over things like reddit long before here.