Kathy Xu, the founder of The Dorsal Effect, an eco-tourist company shared in her Facebook letters and an email Singapore Press Holdings had sent to her highlighting that her company had shared several of their newspapers’ articles without license. The media giant claimed copyright infringement and said that Ms Xu had to pay an annual fee to continue displaying the articles.
The articles Ms Xu had reproduced in her website were those of interviews she had given to the various SPH newspapers about her eco-tourism business, and the photos used by the newspapers were Ms Xu’s.
The three articles in question can be found here: http://thedorsaleffect.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/New-Paper-article-on-22nd-Sept-2014.pdf; here: http://thedorsaleffect.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/zaobao-article-080414.jpg; and here: http://thedorsaleffect.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/xinmin-ri-bao-feature-010214.jpg.
SPH’s letters to Ms Xu claimed:
Ms Xu was a school teacher for 7 years before starting her eco-tourism business in 2013. In her website, Ms Xu said:
“After learning about the shark fishing and finning situation and the demand for shark fin soup, Kathy started volunteering on the education arm of Shark Savers Singapore (and still is!) It wasn’t long before she decided that more should be done on the supply side other than the demand side for shark fin soup as well, and soon found herself in Lombok talking to shark fishermen.”
Institutions like the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy do reproduce entire SPH articles (link:Â http://lkyspp.nus.edu.sg/ips/media-room/ips-news-2). It is unclear if they have some special arrangements with the media company.