It's a pretty picture you found online, and you want to make your own. Perhaps to boost your likes and followers.
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The I-Team is finding out how poached pics can cost you hundreds, even thousands of dollars.
It could be a striking image of the city or a gorgeous shot of food.
"I've seen people on Twitter reuse pictures and videos, and they have not really credited them," said Gabriel Barnett.
They could be online pictures that you want for your own social media feed or perhaps a new Facebook cover photo.
"It is very common for people to just take pictures from Instagram and post them on Twitter without crediting the source, or snatching from Google images," said Marcus Washington, a social media user.
"I'll admit it. I am guilty of it. I have done it before," said Sirre David Faulcon, another social media user.
"If you just Google image something and it pops up in front of your face, you think it is yours to take," said Katie Mulhern, another social media user.
But it's not.
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"The first point is that you have to assume that everything out there is protected by copyright, and it's just not necessarily free to use," said Bill McGrath, an attorney at Davis McGrath and works for the Center for Intellectual Property Information and Privacy Law at John Marshall Law School.
"If there's no permission sought, they might send a cease-and-desist letter saying, 'Hey, you never asked for permission and you need permission and you need to pay a license fee for this.' That can create problems for a regular social media user," McGrath said.
McGrath says anyone with rights to a video or picture could make a claim against you.
"If I'm not a professional photographer, but if I get a shot of a dog on a trapeze, and it becomes very valuable, I can have a case?" Jason Knowles asked.
"That's right," McGrath said.
But he says the risk is higher if you use a professional photographer's work, protected by copyright.
"When a cease-and-desist letter comes, it very often has a demand for a payment of a fee. There's a lot of image recognition software out there that photographers use to see if their photos - and where their photos - are being used," McGrath said.
McGrath says a photographer made one of his own clients pay up.
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"An individual who wanted to post a song on YouTube did so and needed some imagery up there," McGrath said. "It was a song about the Chicago Cubs. He went to Google Images, took an image of the marquee and just posted it with the song and later got one of these letters, and it created a problem for him."
Lincoln Park photographer Andrew Weber says he sends cease-and-desist letters mostly to people who are trying to profit from his work.
"So when a client hires me or someone hires me to do a specific job, they are paying me for that. So if I post the photo and they take it, post it on their social media or share it on their channel, I'm losing compensation as far as someone purchasing the rights to use that picture from me by someone else," he said.
Legal experts say the biggest risk can occur if you are using a professional photo to generate money or followers.
Re-using a picture on a small, personal social media where you are not profiting in any way may be a lower risk.
You should always avoid posting random Google images.
"People think that just because it is on the internet, you are posting on social media, that someone else can just take something from you and re-post it on their account. I understand that it is a thing, like, you know this person took this picture and it is a great picture," said Weber. "But if you are taking it and saying, 'I took this,' or using it for a marketing or advertising piece, that's when there is an issue."