How PAOK FC stole my design from 3D warehouse [IMO]
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There would be no harm in contacting you first it would have been professional. Plus you could have recieved the recognition for the design and been rewarded. Someone else got paid for stealing this. I suspect you have a good case anywhere else in the world but the legal system in Greece & Cyprus favours who you know rather than right & wrong. The lawyers would also drag it out for fees. I'd opt for a no win no fee system if i was you. Did you find the creator of the renders ? I'd find it hard for him to deny plagiary. At least as some compensation you are now the rightful designer of a stadium. We here at sketchucation applaud you
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I think without registering the design or copyright, you will be on a sticky wicket and as has been suggested, they can afford more legal representation than I guess you can.
Sods law but the chances are you will not be able to prove conclusively that you came up with the design first and that there are enough similarities to make a case. Bottom line is the lawyers on both sides win as usual. Sorry mate.
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Got a few lawyers in my family; they are willing to do this for free, so there is no economic issue.
Before Saviddis brought the club, the only viable move was for PAOK to move out of the city, using the existing stadium was out of the question. However he though overwise and started renovating the interiors of the existing structure, completing works this summer. He brought in Summer 2012 (so that is the earliest date he could had requested to create a project for the stadium). There was no plan to renovate or do anything to stadium prior to that. The old club owner was against that move, all the over past proposals where for brand new stadiums outside the city.
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Being uploaded to the Warehouse would actually prove a timeline for him and not against him. It proves when he made his design was before theirs. In this type of high profile, high monetary gain design... I would bet anything they'd pay you not to go to the papers.
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It is a good point that the 3dwh upload predates their scheme, so if at least that's sorted.
You do not need to prove copyright, you own it already - unfortunately uploading it onto 3dwh you gave up most of those rights, BUT the downloader also has limitations - they can't 'pass-off' someone else's work as their own
If you have specific things in your SKP like unusual naming conventions or even minor 'mistakes' [an extra line in some geometry that is not critical, but which would have not been replicated by chance in someone else's version], which could be shown to be replicated in their SKP then it shows [some] wholesale copying of your work.
Make a certified version of the uploaded SKP, to be held by an 'impartial' third-party, to avoid allegations of later tampering or adjusting of it to make it more like theirs.
Then serve your legal stuff - listing the amazing coincidences and how you feel they have not acted correctly [they may have broken the TOS of 3dwh, and have probably acted in bad-faith, and almost certainly seem to have shown a lack of integrity, fairness and even simple good-manners]; insist on a similar 'frozen' version of their SKP for detailed comparison purposes. -
http://sketchup.google.com/3dwarehouse/preview_tos.html
@unknownuser said:
Your Content in the Services
The Services allow you to submit content, including 3D models in the SketchUp and Keyhole Markup Language (KML) formats. You retain ownership of any intellectual property rights that you hold in that content. In short, what belongs to you stays yours.
By uploading, submitting or otherwise storing content in the Services, you agree to license certain rights to Google, Trimble and others, as described below:
Models associated with a geolocation (e.g. 3D buildings viewable on Google Earth) submitted before [June 1, 2012] (âExisting Geolocated Modelsâ). You give Google a perpetual, sublicensable, irrevocable, worldwide, royalty-free, and non-exclusive license to reproduce, adapt, modify, translate, publish, publicly perform, publicly display and distribute any Existing Geolocated Models and related content and derivative works thereof which you submit, post or display on or through, the Services. This license is for the sole purpose of enabling Google and its sub-licensees (including Trimble) to make available, display, distribute and promote the Services and related Google and Trimble products and services, including to provide the Existing Geolocated Models and related content to the users of such products and services.
Models that are not associated with a geolocation (e.g. 3D models of everyday objects) submitted before [June 1, 2012] (âExisting Non-Geolocated Modelsâ). You give Trimble a perpetual, sublicensable, irrevocable, worldwide, royalty-free, and non-exclusive license to reproduce, adapt, modify, translate, publish, publicly perform, publicly display and distribute any Existing Non-Geolocated Models and related content and derivative works thereof which you submit, post or display on or through, the Services. This license is for the sole purpose of enabling Trimble and its sub-licensees (including Google) to make available, display, distribute and promote the Services and related Google and Trimble products and services, including to provide the Existing Non-Geolocated Models and related content to the users of such products and services.
All models submitted after [June 1, 2012] (âNew Modelsâ). You give Trimble a perpetual, sublicensable, irrevocable, worldwide, royalty-free, and non-exclusive license to reproduce, adapt, modify, translate, publish, publicly perform, publicly display and distribute any New Models and related content and derivative works thereof which you submit, post or display on or through, the Services. This license is for the sole purpose of enabling Trimble and its sub-licensees (including Google) to make available, display, distribute and promote the Services and related Google and Trimble products and services, including to provide the New Models and related content to the users of such products and services.
Rights granted to other end users of the Services. You give other end users of the Services a perpetual, sublicensable, irrevocable, worldwide, royalty-free, and non-exclusive license to reproduce, adapt, modify, translate, publish, publicly perform, publicly display and distribute Existing Geolocated Models, Existing Non-Geolocated Models, New Models and related content and derivative works thereof which you submit, post or display on or through, the Services.
These license rights continue even if you stop using the Services (for example, if a 3D model which you submitted has been incorporated into Google Earth). You can stop distributing content through 3D Warehouse at any time by using the content removal tools provided, however please note that this will not affect the license rights granted above.
Make sure you have the necessary rights to grant these licenses for any content that you submit to the Services.
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Clear as mud... seems like you're screwed though.
found this here at SCF while I was looking around. Maybe a Trimble Employee will speak up?
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Rights granted to other end users of the Services. You give other end users of the Services a perpetual, sublicensable, irrevocable, worldwide, royalty-free, and non-exclusive license to reproduce, adapt, modify, translate, publish, publicly perform, publicly display and distribute Existing Geolocated Models, Existing Non-Geolocated Models, New Models and related content and derivative works thereof which you submit, post or display on or through, the Services.
This 0.o
I guess it all depends if the TOS will hold up in court or not (EU court or Greece). Judging by this anyone can just make an random google account and let himself rip upon the thousands and thousands of models. This wrong. An uploader should have the option to opt out of this.
What was the ToS at the time of the upload (early 2010)?
Edit: http://web.archive.org/web/20100209005848/http://sketchup.google.com/intl/en/3dwh/tos.htmlAt the time of Upload:
***8.2 You should be aware that Content presented to you as part of the Services, including but not limited to advertisements in the Services and sponsored Content within the Services may be protected by intellectual property rights which are owned by the sponsors or advertisers who provide that Content to Google (or by other persons or companies on their behalf).With the exception of Content generated by you, you may not modify, rent, lease, loan, sell, distribute or create derivative works based on this Content (either in whole or in part) unless you have been specifically told that you may do so by Google or by the owners of that Content, in a separate agreement. For the avoidance of doubt, you may modify, distribute, and create derivative works of Content uploaded by other users in 3D Warehouse.
11.1 You retain copyright and any other rights you already hold in Content which you submit, post or display on or through, the Services. By submitting, posting or displaying the content you give Google a perpetual, sublicensable, irrevocable, worldwide, royalty-free, and non-exclusive license to reproduce, adapt, modify, translate, publish, publicly perform, publicly display and distribute any Content or derivative works thereof which you submit, post or display on or through, the Services.
This license is for the sole purpose of enabling Google to display, distribute and promote the Services and may be revoked for certain Services as defined in the Additional Terms of those Services.11.2 You agree that this license includes a right for Google to make such Content available to other companies, organizations or individuals with whom Google has relationships for the provision of syndicated services, and to use such Content in connection with the provision of those services.***
Depending on when the TOS decided to strip you off your rights, it might be deemed invalid, as such a radical change would for sure require the user to agree and click through it (If I recall it was only the lasts year or so that did that)
The newer TOS/EULA can also could be deemed invalid in court as it could be argued that it was a forced change. E.G. If you want to continue using the service you must accept our new TOS, failure to that will unable the use of a service, so if you haven't backed up your model you would loose it?
However this aint the only way the TOS could be deemed invalid, and presidencies do exist.If I would successfully sue the infringing company, [theoretical speculation] would they then able to sue Google for damages if Google's TOS was deemed invalid?
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You ought to be asking these questions of a lawyer. You'd probably get better and more accurate answers.
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Actually the first sentence holds quite a bit of meat depending on your specific state. Intellectual property rights do not require a copyright and are easily substantiated by your model and the upload date. It would also be interesting if 3d warehouse can track IP by download. That would be your icing on the cake. For a project this large, your concept would be a substantial aspect of the Architect's Schematic Design fee.
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Hi Paul,
Looks like you are getting some very sound opinions here. I have also added '[IMO]' to your header as it can only be your opinion until all the facts come to light. Hope you dont mind
My opinion! It looks to me that there are some questions to be answered. Going to a lawyer is an option but it could cost you a lot and you could end up with a bill! If you can get a lawyer to work on a 'no foal no fee' basis it might be worth considering.
A thought crossed my mind. Do you know who produced the design that you feel has infringed your copyright? And if so, could it be possible to contact Google and determine if this particular person / firm actually downloaded your work. As you are at it, you might get details of all downloader and start from there.
Mike
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Masterpaul,
I can't imagine being in your position right now. No matter the right you conceeded in giving away your model, "You retain ownership of any intellectual property rights that you hold in that content. In short, what belongs to you stays yours."
EDIT:
- I'm of course no expert in the matter and didn't even care to read the full 3D warehouse policy. However I believe it only defends Google's and Trimble's rights to use your work for making money but they don't steal your property. I find it hard to believe Google/Trimble's policy guarantees the right to the people downloading content, to make money from that content in any form. Copyright law is above 3D Warehouse law, and I believe it has been compromised.
However, if the lawyer is not sharing your point of view there's always some dangerous (and probably funny) acts you could pull (wich I wouldn't advice you to because I wouldn't dare pulling them myself).
Let me try to cheer you up with some ridiculous ideas:
- You could talk to the media, newspapers and TV stations! Give them something graphical wich you already have! Put it in an article and let them play those find the differences games! Give them a full professional comparison on text too, because I don't believe reporters know much about architecture. Explain them the core functionality of your own concept and compare with the final one... Don't play the victim part, ridiculize them! Being ashamed is bad for business!
- You could talk to Panathinaikos or Olympiakos too and explore the situation even further!
- I can't believe PAOK knows what hit them. Does PAOK even know about sketchup or 3d warehouse? You could go to PAOK and say that the firm that might have copied your design... might be, well still copying your design... so you are the one who knows how to design stadiums and, therefore, it should be you they should give the project to. Dress a killer outfit and get yourself a bombastic escort and you are game for sure... EDIT: Oh and take a lawyer too... just to keep all ways covered!
- In fact it makes perfect sense... I don't know how professionally envolved you were at designing that, however if the best thing they propose was copied from you, why on earth would PAOK prefer them over you?
Now for a more conservative aproach: The first thing I would do here in Portugal is go talk to the Portuguese Architectural Association and ask them for help. Here they have lawyers that give preliminary legal advice for free and I sincerely think that there are some fundamental deontological questions not being respected here. Greece and Portugal are both in EU so the base rules should be the same. Here that could put them out of business for some years and guess what? PAOK won't be waiting for long... or will they?
EDIT:
- "Imitation is one of the best forms of flattery" I imitated this and don't know who said it first...
I hope I helped or cheered you up a bit!
Best regards,
JQL
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@mike lucey said:
Hi Paul,
Looks like you are getting some very sound opinions here. I have also added '[IMO]' to your header as it can only be your opinion until all the facts come to light. Hope you dont mind
My opinion! It looks to me that there are some questions to be answered. Going to a lawyer is an option but it could cost you a lot and you could end up with a bill! If you can get a lawyer to work on a 'no foal no fee' basis it might be worth considering.
A thought crossed my mind. Do you know who produced the design that you feel has infringed your copyright? And if so, could it be possible to contact Google and determine if this particular person / firm actually downloaded your work. As you are at it, you might get details of all downloader and start from there.
Mike
I have no idea who've done this PAOK so far has not been answering my email. I guess its possible to track them down, a person who infringed has likely downloaded the model multiple times; so that could be a start.
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I note that 'Nomen Architects' [ThessalonĂki] have done a lot of design work for PAOK - so perhaps it's them or their employee ?
The contractors might be 'Iliadis Construction Co' - they have been mentioned in connection with new work at the stadium ?
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@tig said:
I note that 'Nomen Architects' [ThessalonĂki] have done a lot of design work for PAOK - so perhaps it's them or their employee ?
The contractors might be 'Iliadis Construction Co' - they have been mentioned in connection with new work at the stadium ?
Nothing has been mentioned with the renovation.
Well nomen architects, i'm not quite sure, there portfolio work just includes basically includes mostly interiors and a bit of facade, and a pavilion. However they did work at the interior and the club president might be happy with them. -
That is quite shameful. I did not know that the ToS has changed so radically. Even if it did, I agree -- the buyers of the design probably don't know it was stolen.
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this is indeed a difficult subject because historically architecture has been created having other architectures as point of departure. just think of how many "miesian" office towers there are out there obviously modelled on Mies van der Rohe Seagram Building or lesser known towers.
thus the discussion of plagiarism in architecture is a very difficult one. most of the time designing after someone's example is a sort of homage and it always involves some kind of adaptation to different circumstances pertaining to place, program and construction possibilities. this determines that in general any project is unique no matter how much it may have been inspired by another.
however, what we see in the images does not seem to be the same case. it seems as if the initial design has been taken forward by someone else without bothering to alter it in any significant way.
to discuss the matter in court is one possibility but it will certainly cost a lot and will probability drag on for a long time. the question for you is: is it worth the cost and the stress? are there precedents for this kind of lawsuit in your country? could you not approach the promoters and explain the case to them? perhaps you could reach some kind of settlement by which you get paid for your ideas.
just a couple of thoughts. good luck.
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@edson said:
this is indeed a difficult subject because historically architecture has been created having other architectures as point of departure. just think of how many "miesian" office towers there are out there obviously modelled on Mies van der Rohe Seagram Building or lesser known towers.
thus the discussion of plagiarism in architecture is a very difficult one. most of the time designing after someone's example is a sort of homage and it always involves some kind of adaptation to different circumstances pertaining to place, program and construction possibilities. this determines that in general any project is unique no matter how much it may have been inspired by another.
Well they did design for the exactly the same location, and they did rebuild the same stadium.
The promoters, as in PAOK fc, as it was there own tv conference just ignore my emails.
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They won't ignore a lawyer and I'd bet my bottom dollar that a lawyer will take this on pro bono.
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Hmmm... I reviewed the stadium as it stands (according to a sketchup warehouse model that seems to be very close to the pictures I could find, the 2010 original poster's proposal, and the youtube video of the new design (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bza_mEkYALg).
I do see some similarities. It especially seems that both the 2010 proposal and the new design seem to pull the end seats closer to the field, but there are significant differences, also. For instance, the 2010 proposal uses the existing building basically as is, replacing the roof over it. The new design significantly adds to the building. Also, some of the "design elements" highlighted in the original pictures are actually what the stadium looks like now, and both the 2010 proposal and the new design utilize them.
I would be surprised if the person or persons doing the schematic design didn't see the 2010 proposal, but there is a lot of work that was done. The roof lines are very similar, but that seems to be more a matter of form following function.
It looks like there has been some engineering for the new design roof, and the new design uses a different support system.
Most strikingly the interior has a much different look:
The pillar spacing seems to be the same, but I am not sure if that is a function of design or engineering.
So, in my opinion, while some areas seem to be inspired by the 2010 proposal that was in the warehouse, the new proposal has significant differences and seems to have a lot more engineering in the roof supports. I suspect that the similarities that do exist are functional, not design, and probably would not support a legal action. Of course, the laws in Europe may differ significantly from the laws in the US, and that might make a difference.
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