Sent as a text "Hey boo, I think your fb business page would be more awesome with a picture of cupcakes you've made." I hope that doesn't come across as bitchy.
Sent as a text "Hey boo, I think your fb business page would be more awesome with a picture of cupcakes you've made." I hope that doesn't come across as bitchy.
Let's hope that's all the call out she needs and isn't all "wtf are you talking about? of COURSE I made those!" Because, um, awkward!
Post that link on her fb page with an "omg! Look at this! Someone stole your picture! What kind of person would claim a picture that wasn't theirs??!?!?"
I have a photographer friend who just called out another photographer in l.a. for using her pictures a couple days ago. I saw she'd commented on this chick's page in my fb feed and checked it out before her comment got deleted and the photographer thief turned off comments on her wall. She also removed the stolen images.
Here's what you do. Take a screen shot of the post and the page. Then take a screen shot of the real bakery. Paste them together in Paint and write FAIL on it. Submit pic to failblog.cheezburger.com/failbook
Let the internet do the rest.
I have been browsing the cheezburger site for about an hour now. I don't know if I should thank you or be upset that now I can never get online without checking out this site.
You should mention that next time she needs to link to the original baker's picture and company. She'd be pist if someone stole her pics and ideas without due credit, right? Maybe phrase it as more of a professional courtesy instead of not blatantly ripping off someones ideas and committing cupcake plagiarism.