@JimmysSeafood@HuffPost 🦀I hate seafood but I followed you! My family loves seafood, so I’m the blacksheep (or would it be the blue crab??) lol. Showing support from west Texas!🌅
This woman says...
"If you support ICE, you're NOT ALLOWED to eat Mexican food. If you support ICE, you're not allowed to eat food from ANY other country!"
What's your response to this? 🤔
WILD: A bar switched the halftime show - and one customer went off on the owner in front of everyone.
Your bar, your rules… or customers decide what stays on?
Who’s in the wrong here? ⬇️ 🇺🇸
The Zoo Sports Club in St. Petersburg Florida put on the @TPUSA halftime show during yesterday's game.
One male Karen complained to the manager.
Manager stood his ground.
I know where I'll be eating in St. Pete 👊
This liberal teacher’s on the verge of meltdown, props up her phone like therapy, records her existential despair… and posts it online.
Olympic-level self-own. We’re just here with popcorn in the front-row watching liberalism devour itself. 🍿😂👀
@LibOrNormal Can she form a proper sentence w/out the f-bomb? Asking for myself. When I hear anyone screaming like her about things she actually supports her buddies doing automatically makes me wonder if her cornbread is raw in the middle, or if she communicates with Roseart vs Crayola.
@HallsInTheKid@CrazyVibes_1 Who said anyone was suing? You clearly know nothing about copyright laws. That being said, photogs often will change the color or make other edits. It’s not that difficult to ask them, vs breaking the law or ruining their work. (A pro photog would never touch another’s work.)
@texasmomma7@CrazyVibes_1 What psychotic photographer is gonna sue someone for changing the color of a dress. That’s a quick way to kill your reputation.
My future mother-in-law just informed me that she paid over $1K for this light pink beaded dress and plans to wear it to our wedding next week, completely ignoring our “navy blue because we want the mothers to be our something blue” conversation from months ago. When I gently reminded her about the color scheme, she got defensive and said, “well, your family can be in blue,” like this is some kind of competition between the mothers instead of a wedding where we hoped everyone would follow the same plan.
Now I’m stuck wondering if I should buy my own mother a matching pink dress so she doesn’t feel underdressed, or if that makes me the crazy one for enabling this whole situation.
I’ve already found the perfect secondhand formal dress online that would match his mother’s style and price range, and I’m sitting here debating whether spending money I don’t have on a dress my mom doesn’t even want is worth keeping the peace at my wedding.
Part of me thinks I should just let it go and have mismatched mothers, but the other part of me knows my mom will feel self-conscious standing next to someone in a thousand-dollar gown while she’s wearing something from her closet. And honestly, I’m so tired of managing everyone else’s feelings about my wedding that I might just elope instead.
Credit - Emilia Berry
@Jennife01484701@HallsInTheKid@CrazyVibes_1 🤣🤣 You literally copied & pasted the law & still can’t comprehend it. Lawd. You can keep babbling & looking ridiculous. Along with not typing in crayon I also don’t speak in cornbread. Argue your nonsense with someone else, cupcake. I’m gonna enjoy the rest of our day.
@texasmomma7@HallsInTheKid@CrazyVibes_1 no reasonable photographer is gonna refuse you recoloring a dress or sue you for recoloring a dress for your own personal use. Most of them will just do it for you if you ask.
@Jennife01484701@HallsInTheKid@CrazyVibes_1 You are literally backing my statement, lol. Again, you need to learn more about copyright laws & stop spreading false legal advice. If you need crayons to comprehend I suggest getting some. Have a great day & enjoy learning as you Google! 💚
A personal use license for wedding photos grants you permission to print, share, and display your photos for private enjoyment (like on social media or in albums), but the photographer retains copyright, meaning you generally can't use them commercially (like for ads or selling prints) without extra permission, as outlined in your contract. It's a crucial legal agreement that defines what you can do with your memories, even though the photographer legally owns the original image.
Key Aspects of a Personal Use License:
Permission, Not Ownership: You're licensed to use, not own, the photos.
Common Uses: Printing, creating photo books, sharing online (social media, personal websites).
Restrictions: Usually prohibits commercial use (modeling, selling photos, using for business).
Contract Specifics: Your agreement will detail exact rights, potentially including limitations on editing or third-party use.
Photographer's Rights: They often retain rights to use images for their portfolio or marketing, unless you specifically request a clause to limit this.
In simple terms:
You get to enjoy your wedding photos in your personal life, but the photographer holds the keys to the kingdom for commercial purposes, ensuring their work is protected while giving you legal peace of mind
@Jennife01484701@HallsInTheKid@CrazyVibes_1 You said it - personal use. The photographer OWNS THE COPYRIGHT. Not the bride or subject in them. You really need to learn about copyright laws. I don’t type in crayon.
@Jennife01484701@HallsInTheKid@CrazyVibes_1 That’s absolutely false. IF a photog gives those rights THEN you can. (But no true professional will.) Generally only unprofessional photogs would agree to this. It’s an actual law. (Pro photog of over 15 years with 16 years as a hobby before here.) Google can be your friend.
@texasmomma7@HallsInTheKid@CrazyVibes_1 When you buy your wedding photos you buy the rights to those photos so you can have them re-edited unless your contract specifically disallows it which most brides would not accept.
@HallsInTheKid@CrazyVibes_1 That’s a great way to pay a hefty fine (for personal use) & possible jail time (if for commercial use). Copyright infringement isn’t okay because someone wants to dictate how a family member dresses. (Unless you have clear, written permission to edit another photog’s work.)