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After Calling Out AI Company for Stealing His Meme, “This Is Fine” Artist KC Green Strikes a Deal

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Meme Artist KC Green Reaches Settlement With AI Firm The creator of the famous fine meme has struck a quick deal with an artificial intelligence company over a stolen subway ad. Meme creator KC Green has reached an official settlement with AI startup Artisan after the company used his art without clear permission.

The Fast Settlement Process

Specifically, artist KC Green just closed a major legal case. Indeed, he fixed the bitter issue with the startup Artisan. Both sides fully dodged a long and costly court fight. Through this, they saved much money and pure peace of mind. They can now move forward without any dark legal clouds.

Meanwhile, Artisan quickly took down the bad subway ad posters. For example, Zamin News reported that workers removed the clear signs. The tech company cleared all stolen ads in New York City. Additionally, they pulled down the large signs in San Francisco. This fast action showed their deep respect for the artist.

Furthermore, the swift deal helped both sides move on cleanly. As a result, Green deleted his angry online text posts. He wiped his social media accounts of the harsh words. Therefore, the public dispute ended much faster than anyone expected. The whole messy drama only lasted for a few days.

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How The Ad Campaign Started

Subsequently, the main problem began early in May this year. Indeed, Artisan launched a fresh and bold city sales push. They aimed to sell a new smart business AI tool. Consequently, the firm showed big digital ads to city riders. These riders saw the ads inside dark busy train stations.

Additionally, the colorful posters featured a very famous comic dog. Specifically, the sad dog sat inside a bright burning room. This image copied the popular fine meme perfectly and fully. Of course, online fans knew the original art right away. They saw the exact same lines and bright fire colors.

However, the tech company changed the main bold text bubble. For example, the dog now spoke about heavy sales pipelines. The poster told busy bosses to hire cheap AI workers. In fact, it pushed a smart agent named Ava. The firm wanted to grab fast attention from busy crowds.

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The Artist Fights Back

Simultaneously, Green found out about the bold ad campaign online. Indeed, a loyal fan shared a clear digital photo online. The creator felt very upset by the shocking bad news. As a result, he shared his pure anger with followers. He wrote a long post on a popular web site.

Furthermore, he called the whole act a huge digital theft. Specifically, he stated the tech company stole his life work. He urged his young fans to ruin the fake ads. Therefore, many people expected a very bitter hard legal war. Fans felt ready to protect the famous dog drawing hard.

Meanwhile, Green hated the dark thought of a full trial. In fact, he preferred to spend calm time making comics. He stated this plain truth in a TechCrunch news chat. Consequently, a fast cash deal became his very best option. The quick deal let him return to his main art.

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The Core Copyright Problem

Essentially, this clash shows a big modern digital art issue. Indeed, ContentBuffer notes many smart tech firms take random images. They scrape the wide web for free art data sets. As a result, human creators lose their core basic rights. Small artists hold very little power against big rich brands.

Additionally, strict legal rules are changing the broad tech world. For example, a Diaspora Digital Media report covers new business fines. Tech firms face big deep risks when they break laws. Indeed, MEXC News shows how bad press hurts brand trust. Companies must learn to pay the people who make art.

To conclude, artists must guard their own work very closely. Of course, modern firms like Artisan should seek clear permission. They must respect the quiet humans who make viral art. Therefore, fast honest talks can fix broad problems quite well.

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