Monday, June 10, 2019

InfoWars Agrees to Pay Pepe the Frog Creator $15,000 in Copyright Settlement

Pepe the Frog will no longer face Alex Jones in court.

Jones and his lawyers have settled with Pepe creator Matt Furie. Furie sued Jones for copyright infringement because InfoWars used an image of Pepe in a poster it sold during the 2016 election. The two were set to go to trial next month, but reached a settlement Monday. InfoWars agreed to pay Furie $15,000.

The poster depicted a group prominent election personalities—including Roger Stone and Donald Trump. Pepe hovered over Jones himself and to the right of YouTuber Paul Joseph Watson.

“InfoWars had said it planned to ‘free Pepe once and for all,’ but it backed down rather than face trial and lose,” Louis Tompro, one of Furie’s lawyers, said. “If anyone thinks they can make money selling unauthorized Pepe merchandise, they’re wrong. Mr. Furie will continue to enforce his copyrights, particularly against anyone trying to profit by associating Pepe with hateful images or ideas.”

Furie and Pepe’s journey through the legal system began in August, 2017, when a Texas school administrator released an islamobhobic children’s book starring Pepe that landed him a publishing deal with Simon & Schuster distributed Post Hill Press. Furie successfully stopped publication of the islamophobic book and donated profits from its sale to the Council on American-Islamic relations. Since then, Furie has aggressively enforced his copyright when the far right has tried to make money using Pepe. Even Daily Stormer, a Neo-Nazi website, stopped using Pepe.

Jones is the only person who tried to fight Furie’s lawsuit. Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr, the law firm representing Furie, sent InfoWars cease and desist letters and a Digital Millennium Copyright Act Notice, but Infowars wouldn’t stop selling the posters. So Furie sued them, and Jones vowed to fight the lawsuit on the grounds that memes were for everyone, Pepe was fair use, and—according to court documents—that Furie had abandoned his copyright on Pepe the Frog in media interviews.

It was going to be the trial of the century—a battle for the soul of memes. Instead, some cash will end the case prematurely.

InfoWars did not immediately respond to our request for comment.



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