
Ganon_Master wrote:House wrote:Semi, just remember that imitation is the greatest form of flattery.
But it shouldn't be used as an excuse to steal someones work.
House wrote:Did they actually steal images/code? In that case, send an email.
Kamahl wrote:but that mad dont steal any imageshe didnt do anythink illegal.

Kamahl wrote:but that mad dont steal any imageshe didnt do anythink illegal.




harmlessgoat22 wrote:This is obviously immoral what they are doing, but is there a legality issue with reproducing a style if they didn't steal images or code?












CMCDragonkai wrote:I remember that Cadbury once took another company or was it a store to court because they were using the color "purple". Obviously cadbury thought they could sue on that.
However the judge voted on the store's favor. Told them they can't copyright something that broad as a color.
However copyright laws vary between countries. So on the internet, that's even harder. What if that website was hosted in North Korea? They wouldn't even bother replying to your email if you were in US.
Breach of copyright is determined by these factors:
1. the purpose and character of the use;
2. the nature of the copyrighted work;
3. the amount and substantiality of the portion used in relation to the copyrighted work as a whole; and
4. the effect of the use upon the potential market for or value of the copyrighted work.[10]
5. Educational use is regarded as "fair use" in most jurisdictions, but the restrictions vary wildly from nation to nation.
Another thing, is whether their using it for commercial purposes. And even then, that depends on the quantity or "completeness" of the work.
In some countries such most commonwealth, personal use is permissible unless of course such use is commercialized. And also depends on the quantity or "completeness" of the work.
My opinion:
3/4 Morally they have breached copyright.
1/4 Morally they haven't cause they simply made it them selves and imitated it. Plus it's kinda educational anyhow.
80% Legally why bother? It's not commercialized, plus it doesn't even rival you in marketshare. Example: Microsoft won't sue a 10 year old for taking their logo and using it for his soda store.
P.S. You'd probably win if you did take them to court, but the system loses.
I previously wrote:I don't suspect legality is the real issue here.





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