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The news service is pondering whether to send a "cease and desist" order to couple because of their use of a UPI photo for a greeting card.
On February 22, Chief Judge Saris in the District of Massachusetts issued an opinion on a motion to dismiss implicating several complex copyright infringement issues. The Chief Judge’s ruling ...
Greeting card companies have weathered some tough times as more people send good wishes online. But millennials are purchasing more cards, which has helped stabilize the industry.
Greeting card companies need a sympathy note. Many people are giving up cards in favor of digital alternatives or are simply sending fewer cards between major holidays like Christmas and Valentine ...
Manufacturers agreed that the pandemic was a big sales driver for certain segments of greeting cards. “In a year that has been marked by distance, the tried-and-true Everyday greeting card has ...
Easy, Tiger's cards aren't exactly your grandmother's greeting card. No flowery designs and sappy messages that have long been a staple of card aisles. Mike Sayre and Melanie Bridges started their ...
In a remarkable sign of the loss many have been going through during the coronavirus pandemic, the greeting card industry is selling out of sympathy cards.. At least 73,431 people have died in the ...
Americans buy a ton of greeting cards While greeting card sales have gradually declined since the advent of e-cards and other digital modes of communication, Americans still buy about 6.5 billion ...
You've got the traditional card (a handsome piece of artwork with a standard greeting, i.e., "Wishing you the very best of the season"); contemporary card (something more artsy and colorful with a ...
One card simply stated: “Thank You for Being My Person.” Advertisement According to the Greeting Card Assn., Americans purchase around 6.5 billion cards each year.
UPI’s director of photography in Washington says the photo was being used without permission and the company’s legal department is looking into it.
The Plaintiff, LovePop, Inc. (“LovePop”), produces three-dimensional pop-up greeting cards, inspired by a paper-cutting art form called kirigami, for a variety of purposes.