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    • do a chargeback to your bank if temu want it back then they'll write and ask for it. 9/10 they dont bother. dx
    • No reminders are required by law. As a result of that, whether the police say they sent one or not, whether they actually did so or not and whether you received it or not has no bearing on the matter whatsoever.  I have explained what to do in the third paragraph of my post #22. You don't need to do any more than that. The most likely outcome is that your offer (to plead guilty to speeding if the FtP charge is dropped) will be accepted by the prosecutor. What happens next is for the court to decide. This "deal" is done every day in courts up and down the land and all court users (prosecutors, Magistrates and their legal advisors) are familiar with it.  Although I said you could not ask to be sentenced at the fixed penalty level, that was incorrect. There is nothing to stop you asking (and if you do, you should mention it under "Mitigation" when you fill in your return). You can mention the circumstances you were in when you returned the request for driver's details and suggest that is why the error with the stamp may have occurred.  My feeling, however, is that your request will be denied. If it is, you will face sentencing under the normal guidelines. These suggest a fine of half a week's net income (reduced by a third for your guilty plea.- so one third of a week's income). You will also be ordered to pay a "Victim Surcharge" of 40% of the fine and prosecution costs of around £90. You will also have three points imposed on your driving record. You may be lucky and encounter a kindly Magistrate who settles on the fixed penalty equivalent or you may see something in between (with perhaps the prosecution costs left off). But the worst case is as in the previous paragraph. There's no need to fret too much over this. The important thing is to make sure you plead not guilty to both charges and make it absolutely clear that you will plead guilty to speeding only if the other charge is dropped.
    • The problem that I'm having is with Temu. I ordered a cat tree (£152.98) that I want to send back as it's too small for them/not as advertised/flimsy. I would never have paid that amount if I'd known what poor quality/ how small it was. I have contacted Temu about this numerous times, they did get back to me once but they didn't actually help me with their response. I tried to get in touch again but the emails only ran one way so I couldn't get back to them and tell them that they haven't answered me correctly on how to get the cat tree sent back to them. I have attached the emails correspondence into this post. Thank you in advance for the help and support.    Temu email.pdf
    • Stu007. Many thanks for your reply. They have supplied all the necessary documents so it looks like everything is above board.  Many thanks for the link, once again everything seems above board.  I have received a second claim form today as it says the one they sent me did not refer to my tenancy. Ill look at the details later   I have filled out the defence form, took pics, i will redact it later and post the pdf.  
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Copyright law on Photo's


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Hi there,

 

Hoping for some general information. I had a photo of myself and the partner taken in a studio, which we got one copy. They want £400 for a second copy(they can nob right off) so I am just going to scan it and print it myself.

 

Apparently this is a breach of copyright law? However as far as I am aware, the copyright lies with the subject, not the taker, as it's my Image that's been taken and I have not signed anything to say they have full rights or been paid any kind of image licensing fee.

 

Correct me if im wrong on this one? Links if possible.

 

Thanks

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did you pay for the copy?

 

if so game over.

it your property to do what you like but not sell

 

dx

please don't hit Quote...just type we know what we said earlier..

DCA's view debtors as suckers, marks and mugs

NO DCA has ANY legal powers whatsoever on ANY debt no matter what it's Type

and they

are NOT and can NEVER  be BAILIFFS. even if a debt has been to court..

If everyone stopped blindly paying DCA's Tomorrow, their industry would collapse overnight... 

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Under law, it is the photographer who will own copyright on any photos he/she has taken, with the following exceptions. If the photographer is an employee of the company the photos are taken for, or is an employee of a company instructed to take the photos, the photographer will be acting on behalf of his/her employer, and the company the photographer works for will own the copyright.

 

If there is an agreement that assigns copyright to another party. In all other cases, the photographer will retain the copyright, if the photographer has been paid for his work, the payment will be for the photographer’s time and an allocated number of prints. The copyright to the photos will remain with the photographer, so any reproduction without permission would be an infringement of copyright.

WARNING TO ALL

Please be aware of acting on advice given by PM .Anyone can make mistakes and if advice is given on the main forum people can see it to correct it ,if given privately then no one can see it to correct it. Please also be aware of giving your personal details to strangers

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I'm not sure about copyright but when I was younger I used to do a bit of modelling. I had to sign a release form before the photographer could do anything with the pictures; like put them on his website for advertising, or in his portfolio of work

My advice is based on my opinion, my experience and my education. I do not profess to be an expert in any given field. If requested, I will provide a link where possible to relevant legislation or guidance, so that advice provided can be confirmed and I do encourage others to follow those links for their own peace of mind. Sometimes my advice is not what people necesserily want to hear, but I will advise on facts as I know them - although it may not be what a person wants to hear it helps to know where you stand. Advice on the internet should never be a substitute for advice from your own legal professional with full knowledge of your individual case.

 

 

Please do not seek, offer or produce advice on a consumer issue via private message; it is against

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Here is some more information for you to go through:

 

P-16: Photography and copyright

WARNING TO ALL

Please be aware of acting on advice given by PM .Anyone can make mistakes and if advice is given on the main forum people can see it to correct it ,if given privately then no one can see it to correct it. Please also be aware of giving your personal details to strangers

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But if its my image, surely the rights to it remain with me?

 

Nope..thats like saying the copyright for famous works of art belongs to the screamer or the girl with flowers or 'david', the photographer would say its his 'art'and talent that created the photograph, the fact you are in it is irellevant, the law in the uk doesnt cover the subject, I can go out now and take pix of people, the copyright is with me.

 

Although if you scanned n printed the photo for your own personal use |I can't see how they would know about it.

 

Andy

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Hi Andy

 

As everyone is saying, and the law The Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988 states the the copyright is rest with the creator of the works. This can be assigned but is best to be done in writing. ( in a photographer he who presses the trigger)

 

If a photographer takes a photograph of let's say the Nike tick, The copyright in the photograph he created rest with him BUT the Nike tick is also a Trade Mark (subject to copyright) and the photographer could not sell the image as Nike would have an action against him for breach of their rights. This applies to many works of art and other obscure items (The London Underground Sign is one).

 

I will post a link here [url=http://www.salshuel.co.uk][/url]http://www.salshuel.co.uk which clearly explains the full extent of copyright and photography by an expert in copyright law, she acts as an expert witness and used to work for British Association of Picture Libraries and Agencies BAPLA.

 

Getting to your situation, I think what you are being charged is extortionate. If you did copy the image you would be technically breaking the law! But we all do this when we copy things of the TV, copy music. They would have to find out then bring an action against you. The damages they would receive would be minimal.

Edited by flyingdr
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