As a student, I have in the past used otherâs creative work as a source of inspiration, references, and evidence. I have always been very careful to give the artist credit in order to avoid plagiarism. If I canât for whatever reason locate the name of the artist, I link the site where I got the image, text, etc. Unfortunately, that wasnât the case for graphic artist Shepard Fairey. In order to create the âHope Posterâ to help Obamaâs presidential campaign, Fairey used photographerâs Mannie Garciaâs photo, which he got off Google images, as a base for his poster. Fairey did not credit Garcia, and for that reason had to face legal repercussions. In the end, the resolution to the Fairey copyright case was Fairey agreeing to not use anotherâs work without a license and giving credit, both parties will have rights to create and distribute the poster, and a collaboration from both parties to create a new set of images. They also agreed to financial terms that werenât discussed with the public. I believe this was a fair outcome for the case. Both parties ended up with what they wanted, and along the process, the details and the purpose of the copyright laws were clarified and strengthened for future use in other alike cases.