Ethics Entry 2a

Back in high school when I was first studying graphic design, I donā€™t remember taking the time to really credit artistsā€™ work when I used it. I also had a mentality of ā€œIf itā€™s on the internet, it must be okay for me to use.ā€ I never thought of the laws or unethical nature of crediting artists, as stated in the AIGA Business Ethics handbook. I wasn’t educated on copyright laws and didn’t go out of my way to look into them. Itā€™s good that practicing this since high school, Iā€™ve gotten the chance to correct that and be taught how to properly give credit if wanting to use someone elseā€™s design. During college, I began crediting artistsā€™ and giving attribution, but I began to get bored of it. This pushed me to practice using illustrator and translating my sketches into digital pieces on there. It took so much more time, but I felt more proud of my work. Working for my supervisors, sometimes my drawing style doesnā€™t fit the design weā€™re working on, which is when giving attribution comes back into play.

 AIGA Business_Ethics 47556770-Use-of-photography-1-MB.pdf

 AIGA Business_Ethics 47556757-Guide-to-copyright-1-MB.pdf

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