This blog was created as a backup for my Church and State blog at Google Blogger; after that blog was temporarily blocked on 14 May 2021.

Author: Lola Heavey Page 4 of 7

Pixsy (day 185): I have found Declan’s Motion to Dismiss to fight their threatened court action in an article titled “Defense Against the Dark Arts of Copyright Trolling”. No sooner had we heard from them than they were named and shamed by Computer Weekly and it’s a truly sickening read

Almost all the images in this blog post had to be transferred to an alternative host website for rectification. It seems that amplified images in this Church and State blog that are held in MediaFire may have subsequently been restored by the company to their true size.

Our Church and State website has no less than 63 Nobel Laureates on it despite the never-ending assault on our email; see paragraph 2 under “Church and State” on this blog’s sidebar (updated today).

Fourth Notice: Unauthorized Use of Mr. Hiltscher’s Image – Case Reference: 002-110889

9/12/20

These con men can do a lot electronically but enforcing their claim will require bringing a suit. Paying $249 is just a dispute=a small claim. Which has not been proven.

I would ignore and if the matter requires legal help we will help you but until then I would not send them a dime.

file:///C:/Users/Don/Downloads/002-110889_Unauthorised%20Use%20of%20Image.pdf\

Keep us posted.

Don

Article: “Defense Against the Dark Arts of Copyright Trolling” by Matthew Sag and Jake Haskell. Download PDF

ABSTRACT: In this Article, we offer both a legal and a pragmatic framework for defending against copyright trolls. Lawsuits alleging online copyright infringement by John Doe defendants have accounted for roughly half of all copyright cases filed in the United States over the past three years. In the typical case, the plaintiff’s claims of infringement rely on a poorly substantiated form pleading and are targeted indiscriminately at noninfringers as well as infringers. This practice is a subset of the broader problem of opportunistic litigation, but it persists due to certain unique features of copyright law and the technical complexity of Internet technology. The plaintiffs bringing these cases target hundreds or thousands of defendants nationwide and seek quick settlements priced just low enough that it is less expensive for the defendant to
pay rather than to defend the claim, regardless of the claim’s merits.

We report new empirical data on the continued growth of this form of copyright trolling in the United States. We also undertake a detailed analysis of the legal and factual underpinnings of these cases. Despite their underlying weakness, plaintiffs have exploited information asymmetries, the high cost of federal court litigation, and the extravagant threat of statutory damages for copyright infringement to leverage settlements from the guilty and the innocent alike. We analyze the weaknesses of the typical plaintiff’s case and integrate that analysis into a strategy roadmap for both defense lawyers and pro se defendants. In short, as our title suggests, we provide a useful guide to the defense against the dark arts of copyright trolling.

6 January: Pixsy have escalated their outrageous threat to our Church and State website (day 57). The Equality Advisory and Support Service distorts and dismisses Declan’s case of discrimination. And the never-ending assault on our email has resulted in the sabotage of an offer of financial help to us personally


Automated image recognition: How using ‘free’ photos on the internet can lead to lawsuits and fines; Germany-based photographer Marco Verch uses computer scripts to populate the internet with topical images and photographs. People and companies who make mistakes in following the complex licensing terms of his ‘free to share and adapt’ photographs receive threatening ‘legal’ demands. This article dated 17 November 2020 was published the week after we first heard from Pixsy. It reveals that Pixsy “manages and sends payment demands on Verch’s behalf”. Volunteers at Wikipedia banned Verch from the platform in 2018 because they took exception to his images being uploaded “with the purpose of causing harm to re-users”. Pixsy describes Verch as a “respected photographer who takes significant steps to ensure that his imagery and its value is protected”. There is little publicly available evidence Verch ever sold substantial numbers of his photos commercially. “Verch is a big source of business for Pixsy,” said one legal expert working on an active case against Verch, on condition of anonymity. Universities, small family businesses, students and voluntary organisations have been ambushed with demands for huge payments after publishing seemingly free images available through popular photographic sites on the internet.

Swiss court finds that Marco Verch’s free photos have zero financial value

The owner of a media company in Zurich, Switzerland, set a legal precedent in May 2020 after the business successfully took legal action against Verch.

After a two-and-a-half-year legal dispute, the Commercial Court in Zurich overturned Verch’s claims for damages of €6,127 against the business, and ordered him to pay legal costs.

The company claimed that Verch’s business model was to systematically offer free licences for his images in order to issue high claims against users “in the event of the slightest (or no) licence infringement”.

The court found that Verch had made photographs available free of charge for both commercial and non-commercial use on Flickr under a Creative Commons licence.

There was no concrete evidence that Verch had licensed photographs any other way than through CC 2.0 licences, and therefore no evidence they had an economic value, it said.

The case is important because, like earlier cases in Germany, it implies that free-to-use photographs have zero financial value when owners claim for damages.

The court found that Verch could not have suffered any damage if the company had failed to include links requested by Verch in his licence conditions, since the links only led to further free photographs.

Verch did not specify what licence conditions had been infringed, and the company was unable to see what breaches it was legally accused of. Verch had been unable to prove copyright infringement, the court said.

The court record shows that his legal representatives took a tough line with the media company caught up in the dispute, offering an “amicable” settlement only if the company agreed to pay over €4,000.

4 January 2018

Verch issued an invoice to the company owner for €5,130 of licence fees for the use of eight of his images. The company had named the source of the pictures as Flickr, named the author and the licence, and had mistakenly named the source of one of the pictures as Picasa.

Verch argued that the company should have mentioned the author of the photographs, linked to the original image and linked to the Creative Commons licence.

17 January 2018

The company apologised to Verch and said it had removed the images from the web but saw no reason to pay the licence fee demanded by Verch.

24 January 2018

Verch’s legal representatives claimed damages of €4,485, made up of an alleged “user fee” for the 10 pictures and +100% “surcharge for failing to mention the author” on one picture, and reimbursement for legal expenses of €1,642.40.

6 February 2018

The company rejected Verch’s claims for financial damages on the grounds that the photographs had no commercial value.

21 February 2018

Verch’s legal representative made an email offer to settle the case “amicably” for a lump sum payment of €5,000, if paid within a deadline of just over three weeks.

12 March 2018

The media company did not accept Verch’s right to claim compensation but offered to settle the case for a lump sum payment of €250.

23 April 2018

Verch’s legal representative now offered to settle for €4,500, but threatened to issue legal proceedings if the bill was not paid in a month.

23 April 2018

The media company said it could not pay without knowing what the payment was for or what legal violations it was accused of.

8 May 2018

Verch’s legal representative claimed that the infringing pictures did not link to the CC 2.0 licence or to Verch’s original image.

14 May 2018

The company said it was not prepared to pay damages of several thousand euros over the alleged missing links on its photo credits. It offered a settlement payment of €1,000.

1 June 2018

Verch’s legal representative rejected the proposed settlement and offered to settle for €4,250.

12 June 2018

The company took legal action against Verch, challenging the validity of Verch’s claim for damages for breach of his licensing terms.

6 November 2018

The company informed the court that it had been unable to reach a settlement with Verch.

8 February 2019

The company again informed the court that it had been unable to reach a settlement with Verch.

26 March 2020

The court declared it would rule on the dispute after both sides waived their right to full trial.

6 May 2020

The Commercial Court of the Canton of Zurich rejected Verch’s claim for damages and ordered him to pay costs.

See also: “Pixsy’s ‘Unauthorized Use’ Claim Would ‘Break the Internet'” at https://strellasocialmedia.com/2019/08/pixsys-unauthorized-use-claim/

Declan loses this Financial Ombudsman case

The Royal Bank of Scotland Group Headquarters in Gogarburn. The RBS owns National Westminster Bank (NatWest).

Declan dealt with the Financial Ombudsman Service (FOS) about the RBS’s NatWest for over a year following the non-payment of his salary by standing order. The Financial Ombudsman effectively found in a final decision in this case that the Executive Case Manager at RBS wouldn’t have been reasonably aware when she paid Declan compensation on 17 February 2020 – in recognition of issues he had experienced in setting up two replacement standing orders on the Network for Church Monitoring account – that there had been some error previously made by NatWest in setting up the replacement standing order for the payment of his salary. Declan’s complaint about the subsequent cancellation of the standing order without his knowledge or consent that resulted in the non-payment of his salary on 24 February 2020 was passed by the investigator to an ombudsman, who is the former Team Manager at FOS and has held roles at Alliance and Leicester (now Santander). Below is a link to Declan’s response to the ombudsman’s published decision not to uphold his complaint.

FOS investigator: “NatWest have said although the cancellation was processed on the 12th February 2020, it wasn’t uploaded for processing until later – so it didn’t actually cancel until the 19 February 2020.”

26 March: NatWest Bank: Declan’s response to the Financial Ombudsman’s decision on their website. Pixsy continues to chase payment for the past non-commercial use of one image on the Church and State website

The above complaint concerning the non-payment by standing order of Declan’s salary was only the first of three complaints about NatWest that he submitted to the FOS last year for resolution. The first of the other two complaints involved the wayward transfer in branch of £1,850 to St Mungo’s by court order, after the cashier manually changed Declan’s surname from Heavey to Henry. This was another complaint not upheld by the FOS, notwithstanding that Declan received £30 compensation with a final decision letter before the error was resolved with St Mungo’s.

The FOS’s third investigation is ongoing and relates to the second time, on 7 October 2020, we discovered that NatWest had made an error with the spelling of Declan’s surname (Haeavey). I made the discovery when I attempted to make a payment to him online:

20 March: No quick fix from the Financial Ombudsman again this year. We’re still waiting to be made public this Ombudsman’s decision about the non-payment by standing order of Declan’s salary last year. Laptop interference continues unabated

DJ Ruth Fine orders Declan to pay £1,850 in costs

The Central London County Court is based at the Royal Courts of Justice.

The following is the full content of paragraph 4 under “Church and State” on this blog’s sidebar that has been updated today.

4. This eviction matter came before District Judge Ruth Fine at the Central London County Court on 30 June 2020, when both counsel for St Mungo’s (the charity in effective control of our tenancy) and Declan presented their positions. Declan lost the case and was ordered to pay £1,850 in costs. A publishing colleague in America cleared these costs within 24 hours of my blog post about this hearing for strike out on a related issue that was the essence of the claim, i.e., that St Mungo’s would take a phone call to confirm that we are clients of the Mayor of London’s RSI programme. Within a week of the hearing, St Mungo’s had agreed to take this phone call for us both, the Court having ruled that they were not obliged to do so despite our circumstances. This time we escaped bankruptcy (counsel for St Mungo’s asked for £3,407.50 in costs), but consider that to seek pro se access to justice in the courts has become far too dangerous for us. Declan currently has before the Parliamentary and Health Service Ombudsman the decision of the Information Commissioner that allows St Mungo’s to continue processing coercive support plans without our knowledge or consent and that poses a direct threat to his life.

30 June 2020: District Judge Ruth Fine orders Declan to pay £1,850 in costs. St Mungo’s are under no obligation to even vouch over the phone that we are clients of the Mayor of London-commissioned St Mungo’s TST programme (WITH UPDATE 14/05/21)[1]

__________________________

[1] Part of the Mayor of London’s RSI programme in our case is access to the Mayor’s Tenancy Sustainment Team (TST) at St Mungo’s.

I am truly appalled by the unlawful violation of the Heavey’s basic right to send and receive email without interference. I would be most grateful for anything you may be able to do by way of taking measures to correct this gross abuse.

An American professor to then Home Office Minister Lynne Featherstone in 2010

The group targeted above was US National Medal of Technology and Innovation laureates. These national medals are presented by the President of the United States on behalf of the American people, and are among the highest honours in the nation for professional achievement.

At the end of February, for the first time in weeks, we were able to get an email directly to a close colleague in Washington, DC. But emails from us to this colleague continue to be blocked on an on-off basis and more off than on these past few weeks. Among Declan’s blocked emails in February was his reply to the 19th Nobel Prize laureate to accept his invitation to be listed as one of our Honorary Associates. Declan writes that: “[W]e are engaged in a life and death struggle for survival (my wife’s blog post about this is here).” The link is to my regularly updated post (most recently this morning) about the Equality and Human Rights Commission’s refusal to accept a referral of discrimination from Lyn Brown MP. We continue to battle through the never-ending assault on our email, which is worse this year than it has ever been. We have never gone weeks on end without being able to communicate directly with one person by email.

From My Picks:

14 May: Threat to life: Will the Parliamentary and Health Service Ombudsman investigate Lyn Brown MP’s second referral about the Information Commissioner’s decision that allows St Mungo’s to continue processing coercive support plans without our knowledge or consent and that poses a direct threat to Declan’s life? (newer post)

Our list of 301 Honorary Associates includes 20 Nobel Prize laureates, 18 US National Medal laureates and 13 knighted professors notwithstanding the excessive targeting of these categories of emails in particular. (Last month Declan had the honour of adding the 20th Nobel laureate to the list, having had an average of 85% of his emails blocked for over a week.)

http://churchandstate.org.uk/honorary-associates/

“Let me recommend an important web site churchandstate.org.uk. Operating out of London this well-designed and exciting web site covers church-state, population, climate change and other issues. Check it out.” Edd Doerr (1930-2020), (then) President, Americans for Religious Liberty

Email interception: Have all nine of Declan’s emails today relating to brain-computer interfaces been blocked? This category of emails is fast becoming as targeted as prominent space advocates and other notable categories of emails (WITH UPDATE 27/04/21)

Almost all the images posted in this blog post had to be transferred to an alternative host website for rectification. In MediaFire, a lot of the images in this Church and State blog have still not been restored to their true size. We had before MediaFire images deleted and exchanged but the extent of this amplification is new to us. I will be writing to them about this in due course.

I wish to sign on as an honorary associate of church and state.

A Nobel Laureate this year

Our Church and State website has no less than 61 Nobel Laureates on it despite the never-ending assault on our email; see paragraph 2 under “Church and State” on this blog’s sidebar (updated today).

Article 10 of the European Convention on Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms formulates what is the core of free speech. “Everyone has the right to freedom of expression.” In an important interpretation of this article, the European Court of Human Rights in Handyside v. UK (1976) indicated that this “freedom of expression” should be construed as follows. It “is applicable not only to ‘information’ or ‘ideas’ that are favourably received, or regarded as inoffensive, or as a matter of indifference, but also to those that offend, shock or disturb the State or any sector of the population”. Such are the demands of that pluralism, tolerance and broadmindedness without which there is no “democratic society” (see Cliteur, 2010).

Have all nine of Declan’s emails today relating to brain-computer interfaces been blocked? This blog post will be updated with Mailtrack’s Daily Report tomorrow morning. Every email we send is personalised and tailored to the individual. For privacy reasons, the name has been removed from this email to an award-winning cognitive scientist specialising in brain-computer interfaces:

19 April 2021

Dear [name withheld],

My wife and I run a website in London called Church and State at churchandstate.org.uk.

As well as prominent cognitive scientists, there are no less than 61 Nobel Prize laureates on the site, 19 of whom are listed as Honorary Associates. Our 298 associates also include four U.S. National Medal of Technology and Innovation laureates, 13 U.S. National Medal of Science laureates, five Turing Award laureates, three Rumelhart Prize laureates, and 12 knighted professors. Nonetheless, we are currently engaged in a life and death struggle for survival (my wife’s blog post about this is here). We have had 10.7 million hits in the past three years on Facebook and despite the company’s unfair practices. About 70% of our hits are from Americans.

We are a nonprofit, called Network for Church Monitoring, that works toward supporting secular governments and the separation of church and state. We recognise that some religious people cannot refrain from trying to use government to impose their beliefs on everyone and believe that a lack of separation is detrimental to scientific progress. We deal with the publication of issues significant to social policy in a number of key areas, e.g., climate change, population, futurism (incl. brain-computer interfaces), atheism, and free speech. Please may I add your name to our list of Honorary Associates? There are no obligations with this whatsoever.

Network for Church Monitoring welcomes support from all of those who share its general objectives and goals, without concern for agreement on each and every aim. Our Honorary Associates do not therefore necessarily endorse every position advocated by us, but endorse our efforts to expose the public to the scientific perspective on crucial issues of public policy. (http://churchandstate.org.uk/honorary-associates/)

Thank you in advance for your consideration of this invitation.

Sincerely,

Declan Heavey
Managing Director
Network for Church Monitoring

http://churchandstate.org.uk/about/


For months we experienced an almost total blockade of our emails to prominent space advocates anywhere in the world (only the latest targeted group). That blockade extended to an offer of financial help to us personally the week before Christmas 2020. We continue to have problems sending and receiving emails and op-eds when it comes to a close colleague in Washington, DC. Declan’s use of his mobile phone to try to get my permission emails through to prominent space advocates has also proven unsuccessful. On both recent occasions the leading expert could only be reached through voice mail. When it comes to space travel, we most recently had the honour of listing a Hall of Famer astronaut among our Honorary Associates. It was one of the few emails that we have gotten through to prominent space advocates since last September. (A distinction is made here between a prominent space advocate and someone who has written an article about space travel. I do get some permission emails through to space writers, but regrettably not very many and only occasionally.)

23 December 2020: The blockade of Church and State emails extends to the sabotage of an offer of financial help to us personally. Pixsy with their outrageous Third Notice threaten our Church and State website. And Declan’s primary laptop targeted this afternoon

I am truly appalled by the unlawful violation of the Heavey’s basic right to send and receive email without interference. I would be most grateful for anything you may be able to do by way of taking measures to correct this gross abuse.

An American professor to then Home Office Minister Lynne Featherstone in 2010


The Investigatory Powers Tribunal has carefully considered your complaint and Human Rights Act claim, and has concluded that it is obviously unsustainable, and thus falls within the provisions of Rule 13(3)(a) of the Investigatory Powers Tribunal Rules 2000, such that, pursuant to s67(4) of the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act 2000, the Tribunal has resolved to dismiss the claim.

The Investigatory Powers Tribunal was created in October 2000 by the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act and given the power to investigate any complaints against the Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ), MI5 or MI6, as well as complaints about surveillance operations mounted by the police or any other public bodies. The Guardian reported in 2014 that the tribunal, which claims to be completely independent of the UK Government, is secretly operating from a base within the Home Office, by which it is funded. The newspaper found that the IPT had investigated about 1,500 complaints and upheld only 10, five of which concerned members of one family who had all lodged complaints about surveillance by their local council. No complaint against any of the intelligence agencies had ever been upheld. The discovery that the IPT is lodged within a Whitehall department has fuelled criticisms of the tribunal that has been levelled by rights groups, lawyers and complainants. The IPT’s critics complain that the secrecy is excessive and that its procedures are stacked so heavily in favour of the government and against complainants that it is fundamentally unfair. According to The Guardian, some senior lawyers have described the IPT as “Kafkaesque”, while one eminent barrister dismissed it as a “kangaroo court”. The newspaper also reveals that because of the perception that the tribunal is unfair, many would-be complainants spurn it.


UPDATE 27 April (5.16pm): Within minutes of posting this bog post on 19 April at 11.56pm, we were cut off the internet the next morning! This was the related Mailtrack Daily Report later that morning:

One of these 10 unread emails was our reply email to a close colleague in Washington, DC.

Mailtrack Daily Reports

Your email was indeed blocked as “junk”. You may use my name as an honorary associate.

A Nobel Laureate in 2007, after one of many telephone conversations Declan has had to try to get emails through.


All ten of these unread emails were to Nobel Laureates.

Our Average Daily Best for years has been 30-40% read.

1. 19/04: 10 emails sent, 0 read; 0% read.
2. 20/04: 12 emails sent, 4 read; 33% read.
3. 21/04: 13 emails sent, 2 read; 15% read.
4. 22/04: 10 emails sent, 2 read; 20% read.
5. 23/04: 10 emails sent, 0 read; 0% read.
6. 24/04: 15 emails sent, 2 read; 13% read.
7. 25/04: 15 emails sent, 1 read; 7% read.
8. 26/04: 12 emails sent, 3 read; 25% read.

Average Best: 13% read; 97 emails sent, 14 read.
Only 2 emails read following a daily report.

For three days in a row, commencing on 19 April, Declan was unable to track previously sent emails. On 20 April we found four such emails binned. We have had massive amounts of draft documents deleted in the past, but, to the best of our knowledge, this deletion of sent emails is unprecedented. We have had already in place systems to weather any extent of this latest assault on our email.

27 April: Pixsy (day 168): I have found Declan’s Motion to Dismiss to fight their threatened court action in an article titled “Defense Against the Dark Arts of Copyright Trolling”. No sooner had we heard from them than they were named and shamed by Computer Weekly and it’s a truly sickening read (regularly updated)

Laptop interference: These past 13 weeks it’s been cuts to the targeted laptop from the internet and speeds as low as 0.11 Mbps (download) and 0.04 Mbps (upload). One of Declan’s laptops was cut from the internet yesterday. The other laptop functioning at 1 Mbps today.

The targeting of one or more of our four operational laptops kicked off again in December 2020. It’s either cut the targeted laptop(s) from the internet (once yesterday) or slow down speeds to anything from 74 Mbps to a fraction of 1 Mbps.[1] For four weeks it was an average 5 Mbps on Declan’s primary laptop until 26 March, when it was 71 Mbps, the first time over 70 Mbps since last December (1 Mbps today). With his secondary laptop, it was an average 20 Mbps for three weeks until 26 March, when it was 61 Mbps, one of the few times over 60 Mbps since last December (61 Mbps today). Seldom have two laptops been treated the same way at any one time, unless we have been cut off the internet altogether for anything up to 7 days to date. This month is a record-breaking fifth consecutive month for this sustained targeting of one or more of our laptops. (Tuesday 6 April was the second day since last December that Declan had two laptops functioning above 50 Mbps, and last Sunday was the second day within the same period of time that his primary laptop was back to the usual normal of 73 Mbps.)

7 February 2019: The targeting of our two primary laptops runs into a record-breaking third month. My primary laptop has been targeted for over three months (WITH UPDATE 23/12/20)

__________________________

[1] The sustained cutting of Declan’s secondary laptop from the internet continued throughout the morning of 2 April (nine cuts in total) as he updated with two laptops the Futurism section of our Church and State website for Rumelhart Prize laureates. The following week we had the honour of listing a third Rumelhart Prize laureate as an Honorary Associate. The Rumelhart Prize was founded in 2001 to introduce the equivalent of a Nobel Prize for cognitive science.

TV interference: 21 days these past 13 weeks it’s been 0% Signal Quality and that includes the last two days in a row and a previous three days in a row for two weeks running (then it’s been particular free view channels that are unwatchable, this week included)

2 January: We have once again lost all free view channels using our second BT TV YouView box (day 4). This time it’s on an on-off basis and by far more off than on. Four cuts during this period on what’s left on HDMI input without these channels. We have had three BT engineers in our flat to date to no avail. No equipment, phone line or aerial fault detected. When we switch from HDMI to Antenna, we have always had and continue to have perfect reception on free view channels using our aerial.

6 January: British Telecom: No let up on inference on individual TV channels using our second BT YouView box. The blockade of Church and State emails has extended to the sabotage of an offer of financial help to us personally. Pixsy’s threat to Church and State remains open and ongoing

From My Picks:

27 April: Threat to life: Lyn Brown MP’s second referral to the Parliamentary and Health Service Ombudsman about the Information Commissioner’s decision that allows St Mungo’s to process coercive support plans without our knowledge or consent and in flagrant breach of our support agreement (regularly updated)

Mayor of London Sadiq Khan

Our list of 300 Honorary Associates includes 20 Nobel Prize laureates, 18 US National Medal laureates and 12 knighted professors notwithstanding the excessive targeting of these categories of emails in particular. (Today Declan had the honour of adding the 20th Nobel laureate to the list, having had an average of 85% of his emails blocked for over a week.)

http://churchandstate.org.uk/honorary-associates/

“Let me recommend an important web site churchandstate.org.uk. Operating out of London this well-designed and exciting web site covers church-state, population, climate change and other issues. Check it out.” Edd Doerr (1930-2020), (then) President, Americans for Religious Liberty

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