

I asked that it be taken down and an accounting of the sellers commissions be given to me. I sent links to the Zazzle products and my copyrighted upload which includes some dates (although the dates are vague by not showing exact upload date/time but does include copyright marks with my name on top of the image.

My original email to them was 6 days ago. Zazzle has been a little more difficult to work with. They gave credit to me via the link from the time the post was first published, and they did use a low-res image originally so yay to them for doing the right thing in the first place! They were easy to work with, communicated with me easily and it totally made my day. Within 24 hours it was changed out and I am one happy camper. I had no issue with them doing such but did ask that they replace the non-watermarked image with a watermarked image. The Food Network has a blog entry displaying my bacon fabric and has a link directly to my fabric. I also found a low-res photo of the bacon on the Food Network.

The guy illegally selling my design on Zazzle products intimating that he doodles in MS Paint and thought he'd make some money off of his doodles. That's how I found my bacon fabric out in the vast web. Click the camera and it'll ask you for an uploaded file or a web address to check against other images on the web. Once the page loads you'll see a familiar text box with a camera icon over to the right. I highly recommend using Googles image search to find your copyrighted images that may be shown on websites you haven't authorized.
