View Full Version : Don't bid on this Pilot TV


Phil Nelson
11-16-2008, 04:21 PM
Sorry if this is the wrong forum, but I am sick to death of people ripping off articles from my website to peddle their stuff on eBay.

http://www.antiqueradio.org/PilotTV-37.htm

I have not included the auction number, for obvious reasons :(

Phil Nelson

Hifirob2
11-16-2008, 04:30 PM
Why don't you report his listing? It will end the auction, won't it?

Rob

Dan Starnes
11-16-2008, 05:04 PM
Thankyou Phil for doing the right thing.
Dan

batterymaker
11-16-2008, 05:15 PM
Someone's in need of a serious beatdown.:twak:

Chimes
11-16-2008, 06:49 PM
Have you reported it to ebay?

site123a
11-16-2008, 08:17 PM
It's true, he shouldn't have linked your website to his auction.. Here's the problem, after people start bidding on his auction, the content of the page becomes permanent, thats to prevent "bate & switch".

You got two options, you can either report it to ebay which will take too long. Or temporarily take down that webpage from your site so the link he has no longer works. Or even better, temporarily replace the Pilot TV page with porno so he looks like an idiot. :D

jpdylon
11-17-2008, 12:17 AM
Or temporarily take down that webpage from your site so the link he has no longer works. Or even better, temporarily replace the Pilot TV page with porno so he looks like an idiot. :D

I second this great idea. Or perhaps, something to the effect of "hey asshole, stop linking to my information for your benefit without my permission!"

clydeselsor
11-17-2008, 12:35 AM
I second this great idea. Or perhaps, something to the effect of "hey asshole, stop linking to my information for your benefit without my permission!"

I like the porn idea better! :D

KLH9
11-17-2008, 12:40 AM
Sorry if this is the wrong forum, but I am sick to death of people ripping off articles from my website to peddle their stuff on eBay.

http://www.antiqueradio.org/PilotTV-37.htm

I have not included the auction number, for obvious reasons :(

Phil Nelson

Use the eBay VERO copyright infringement form to have auctions removed (http://pages.ebay.com/help/community/NOCI1.pdf). I have a dozen auctions removed a week by eBay. I've been a member of their VERO program since they started it. I've even had complete web sites taken down when I contacted the host. My online content has been registered with the Library of Congress (copyright office) since 1998.

One thing I have found helpful is a little javascript that disables highlighting. If you can't highlight text you can't copy it. I don't think the script will post in here but if you are interested let me know via PM and I will pass it along to you

Dave S
11-17-2008, 09:31 AM
Hi Phil,

I'm actually a little ambivalent about this type of bad manners. On the one hand, we all use the web as a resource for information. And on the other hand, there are right and wrong ways to use the information people have so generously published there. Where do you draw the line? Is it making any reference whatsoever to your material? Or in linking directly to your files without your permission? Copying your files? Or using you material in a commercial way? I'm not trying to defend this guy (I think he should have asked you first) but he did disclose that he found the information on the 'net and was reproducing it in his listing. I don't think he really thought about it. His intentions, from his perspective, were probably relatively pure. He just didn't consider YOUR perspective.

I'd caution against modifying the site so that material can't be copied. I've referred to your pages many times; they're a great resource, and it was a great convenience to be able to copy down information for offline reference.

Still, when the line has been crossed it's upsetting. That line may be different for each of us. I'm not sure I'd be too terribly offended if the information I posted was, however backhandedly, honored as an authoritative resource in this way. But I did have an instance a while back where one of those automatically generated websites that seem to exist for no other purpose other than to generate ad revenue linked to one of my images on the NJARC site. Ordinarily, I wouldn't mind, but A) this was, to me, an offensive type of site and B) the reason I even noticed it was they were consuming an appreciable amount of my bandwidth, which was somewhat limited at the time. I try to be a nice guy, but I'm not always completely successful. So I replaced the shot of the swapmeet with this one

Their link to our file was changed several days later and the guys in the club all had a good laugh!

--Dave Sica

Phil Nelson
11-17-2008, 12:39 PM
Yes, I did report the auction to eBay. No action so far. I also modified my TV-37 page to explain that I have temporarily removed the real article because it was illegally copied.

I have often given permission for people to use my articles & photos for various purposes -- but not selling on eBay, since my site has always been noncommercial.

This guy [A] didn't ask permission in the first place, and [B] copied a large portion of the article verbatim without attribution. When I asked him to cut it out, he just added a note stating that he had "gathered" some of his information online, with a link to my article.

I try not to be overly sensitive to this, but in the past people have conducted fraudulent auctions using the entire text and all of the photos from some of my articles. Others have copied text and/or photos, or linked to my site in such a way that a bidder might be confused, thinking that my fully restored set might be the one they're bidding on, or thinking that my noncommercial site is a place where everything is for sale.

Copyright infringement is a matter of degree. I wouldn't have a problem if the guy had simply used facts from my article, rather than copying & pasting a big chunk of it verbatim. I wouldn't have a problem if his description had said, "You can read more about this kind of TV at <link>."

It's not good enough for him to say he "gathered" information online. That's like me saying, "Please buy this novel entitled Jurassic Park by Phil Nelson. I gathered it by photocopying the novel Jurassic Park by Michael Crichton."

I would rather not put porno pictures on my website, even temporarily, or defeat copying from pages. As Dave mentioned, it can be useful to copy a tube lineup, or whatever, from an article, and print it out to refer to in your workshop. Helping people out in that way is why I go to the trouble of writing this stuff in the first place.

This person has sold hundreds of items on eBay and should know better. He didn't have the courtesy to reply to my message to him. Perhaps he is a well-meaning nitwit, but he should at least be called when he crosses the line.

OK, enough whining :)

Phil

similost
11-17-2008, 12:46 PM
Goatse would have been the proper response, and tought this person well.

Findm-Keepm
11-17-2008, 01:05 PM
Folks,

We can all help Phil in this - you don't have to be the legal copyright owner to report an infringement. On the subject auction page, click on "report item" at the bottom of the page, then select "listing violations" then "copying of your listing" and then "Someone copied text or pictures from another web site or eBay listing"

In the brief description block, I simply stated that the auction copied copyrighted text from the website listed in the auction.

I think if we all reported this, eBay might get the message that we all take this seriously. Many reports of the same listing are very hard to ignore.

Cheers,

ranf1970
11-17-2008, 01:23 PM
Folks,

We can all help Phil in this - you don't have to be the legal copyright owner to report an infringement. On the subject auction page, click on "report item" at the bottom of the page, then select "listing violations" then "copying of your listing" and then "Someone copied text or pictures from another web site or eBay listing"

In the brief description block, I simply stated that the auction copied copyrighted text from the website listed in the auction.

I think if we all reported this, eBay might get the message that we all take this seriously. Many reports of the same listing are very hard to ignore.

Cheers,

Done! Good luck Phil!

Steve McVoy
11-17-2008, 02:18 PM
I only object when someone copies pictures or materials from my site into an Ebay listing without giving credit. If someone wants to link to a page on my site to provide more information on the item he is selling, I don't have a problem with that. After all, the purpose of the site is to make information available.

Phil Nelson
11-17-2008, 03:25 PM
I wasn't trying to cause a flood of complaints against this guy, which would probably have no effect, anyway. In my limited experience, eBay only cancels an auction in blatant situations, and this guy brought it back into borderline by adding an indirect credit to my website (only after I complained).

There is basically no penalty for this kind of thing, other than the seller having the auction cancelled and needing to relist it.

As Steve said, the purpose of this kind of website is to provide information, so you take your risks. It just chapped my hide that this dude was too busy peddling his wares to even send a one-line reply to my message to him.

And now, on a happier topic, I need to get back to my recapped TV-37 and figure out why it mysteriously lost HV!

Phil

Tony V
11-17-2008, 11:17 PM
I understand where your comming from Phil and if this would have happened to me, i would be irritated as well. I will ad though that i enjoy your website. Since i own many of the models that you have restored on your site, i visit it frequently. It has helped me get many of mine going and I wanted to thank you for the help you have given me through your detailed pages and pictures. When i see someone else having trouble with their restoration with a set that you have done, i refer them to your website.
-Tony

andy
11-18-2008, 12:03 AM
...

hposter
11-18-2008, 02:39 PM
I've copied bits and pieces in the past, and then referenced...the internet. If I wanted people to see a complete article or photo layout, I then put the link in.

Some people ask to reference or copy it, and I just say, sure--thanks for asking. I remember seeing one of my TV images on someone's blog..it made me steam for a bit...but not really anything you can do about it. Not much, anyhow.

On those "This site can not be copied"...oh yes, they all can be. I've decided not to even try the script lines. It really only takes a click and some creative work, to defeat this.

Besides, if you don't want someone to know something, or copy/plagiarize it, then you probably shouldn't post it. If I have a big secret (maybe I do, and maybe I don't), I'm not about to put it online. Plus, with the pictures, you can always use PhotoShop or similar, and drop your name or website across the image. That way, they'll be fine on your site, and if someone steals it, they'll be embarrased, or at least give you free advertising. If 2 million potential bidders from around the world see your website referenced, you know loads of people will take a look at your complete site, and many of those will bookmark it.

Phil Nelson
11-18-2008, 04:56 PM
If I have a big secret (maybe I do, and maybe I don't), I'm not about to put it online.
In followup email with this guy, it appears he's more an innocent dolt than an evildoer, so I tried to educate him a little and we have buried the hatchet.

More to the point . . . can't you tell us at least one of your secrets? :)

Phil Nelson

Sandy G
11-18-2008, 05:38 PM
Feckin' guy's too lazy to take a pic of his own set he's tryin' to shill... And its NOT like TV-37s are so rare & exotic that you can't find a picture of one any number of places..I'd hazard a guess they are prolly the most common of the really "antique" sets-I've seen one "On Da Bay" almost every time I prowl thru there.

andy
11-18-2008, 06:57 PM
...

wajobu
11-18-2008, 07:05 PM
This text has been added:

"On Nov-15-08 at 16:22:42 PST, seller added the following information:
Some of the information about this item in the listing above was gathered from the website noted below: http://www.antiqueradio.org/PilotTV-37.htm"

Charming.

kbmuri
11-21-2008, 09:34 PM
Phil -

Your contribution to this hobby is well above and beyond the call of duty. Your web pages are informative, enlightening, entertaining, and motivational. Your writing style is elegant and to-the-point. Your ability to explain complex concepts in easy terms is, well, Asimovian. Nobody doubts that "you 'da man" when it comes to your website. I personally thank you for providing the service, as others here at AK have thanked you (and I'm sure many more readers out there do too). Excelent work and Kudos.

The law is the law, however.

95% of the laws in this country are there for a reason, and for the most part they are good reasons. And if you disagree with a law there's a process in place to change it involving lawyers and judges and appeals all the way up to the Supreme Court. Copyright laws have been argued up the food chain ad nauseum and they're pretty well cast in stone at this point. You could try to argue this case if you wanted to, but you wouldn't get very far. There is a gray area but the eBay seller was nowhere near it.

Current US Copyright law contains a doctrine called "fair use". Contrary to your statements (and others) in this post, it is, in fact, not illegal to copy somebody else's copyrighted work. Not if it fits within the "fair use" clauses established in title 17 (chapter 107) of US the copyright code. The 4 clauses are outlined here:

http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.html

The first clause might seem to be in your favor, as the guy posted your copyrighted words on eBay, but it doesn't matter that he happened to be engaging in commerce when he cited your words -- the actual use must have been commercial in nature -- i.e. he must have been selling or buying (or trading in) your words to violate this clause. He was selling a TV set. If he was selling a pamphlet about facts on a Pilot TV-37 and stole your words to put in the pamphlet, you might have had a case. As it is, he was using your words in an educational manner to inform his potential customers about the details of his TV. This is fair use. Any lawywer would argue thus, and any judge would decide in his favor.

Clause 2 of the code refers to the nature of your work and essentially boils down to whether your copyrighted work is fiction, fact, or art. If the person using your work provides another outlet for viewers of your artwork, he probably violates this clause. Say, if he put a highly-detailed scan of the Mona Lisa on his eBay ad and said his TV was as pretty as a DaVinci, he might have violated clause 2 -- if his posting of the scan caused some people not to go to the Louvre to see the real thing.

If he uses your fiction, a lot less likely so -- say if he had excerpted his favorite passage of Moby Dick and said the TV makes him feel like sailing. Maybe a violation, maybe not.

If he uses your description of facts, most of the time a judge says "no". Facts is facts and repeating them usually isn't harmful to society.

Clause 3 deals with how much of your work is taken. Since he excerpted a few paragraphs from one page of your body of dozens or hundreds of pages, his intent was pretty clearly not to steal your work but to repeat a specific, small portion of it. His theft wasn't gross.

Clause 4 is usually the most important clause -- i.e. can you show "damages"? His intent clearly wasn't to steer viewers away from your work -- to devalue your work by competing with it. In fact (as was suggested by other posters to this thread) he very likely increased your audience by referring to your work (although he had no obligation to do so, because not doing so did not cause you to lose any audience members). So he in no way damaged your website's ability to accomplish its mission. You can't show any tangible damages. So no violation of clause 4.

The guy did nothing wrong. Absolutely not.

Did he engage in bad manners? Maybe so. But that's not illegal. The amount of bad manners displayed here on this thread? -- a lot!

"Innocent dolt"
"Feckin' guy's too lazy"
"Plagiarizing"
"this guy brought it back into borderline"
"people ripping off articles"
"Someone's in need of a serious beatdown"
"replace the Pilot TV page with porno"
"hey asshole, stop linking"
"well-meaning nitwit"

Well, the eBay seller doesn't have a monopoly on bad manners.

As far as:
It's not good enough for him to say he "gathered" information online. That's like me saying, "Please buy this novel entitled Jurassic Park by Phil Nelson. I gathered it by photocopying the novel Jurassic Park by Michael Crichton."
again, he wasn't selling your website, he was selling a TV, so the analogy fails.

And as far as:
Copyright infringement is a matter of degree
well, no, copyright infringement is very clearly black and white. It's Title 17, chapter 1 of US code. Rules are rules.

Lastly, please correct me if I'm wrong. Is the artwork in your avatar your own personal work? Or did you copy it? The eBay seller frankly did less if it is not. And I notice, even on your web page in question, you link to an RCA manual without citing the reference. Glass houses and throwing stones and all that.

It's ok, though. Avatars fall within "fair use". So does linking to an RCA manual to increase the value of your own work.

That's my rant for the day. On a much lighter note, I did buy the TV set. Mostly I just wanted to see the poor guy get a good price after the beating he took here, but I ended up winning too. Fair enough, I've been meaning to get a TV-37 for a long time anyway, and this one looks pretty intact (barring UPS manhandling in the next few days). I passed on one at the annual Lansing Antique Radio Swapmeet last summer and have been kicking myself since. This one will end up being only a few dollars more expensive, and now it has all kinds of cool sentimental value to me because of the "Phil Nelson Controversy". It should be a fun rebuild.

Hope this post was informative. I'm not into flame wars. Just saying my piece.

Cheers. :beerchug:

jeyurkon
11-22-2008, 01:05 PM
I'm not commenting on whether this whether this was "Fair Use" or not.

I don't believe issues of copyright infringement are "black and white" though. Fair Use wasn't part of previous copyright law. It was codified into chapter 107 later as a result of various court decisions. The application of it still isn't easy to deterimine in many cases.

See http://www.copyright.gov/fls/fl102.html

They, the Copyright Office, recommend always asking for permission.

John Y.

Phil Nelson
11-22-2008, 04:16 PM
I didn't intend to open a black-hole debate on copyright law, so this will be my last comment.

kbmuri, thanks for your compliments, and congratulations on getting a good deal on your TV-37. Mine was working reasonably until it suffered a relapse. Kind of like my brain at times.

I have a fair amount of experience with copyright issues from past careers, but nobody cares about that. IMHO this guy crossed the "fair use" line when he copied a big chunk of my article without asking permission, and without crediting the source until after I complained.

Water under the bridge. I have made peace with the dude and I hope I convinced him to ask permission before copying -- just in case.

Everyone can learn more about copyright via http://www.copyright.gov/ . Anyone who would like to discuss this further is welcome to send me email via http://antiqueradio.org/contact.htm .

Regards,

Phil

edison64
11-22-2008, 08:48 PM
I agree, Nuff said