I think maybe you’re out of the loop here. This is part of a trend to screw over bots that automatically steal art and sell it on random sites. That’s why others are commenting stuff like “I’d buy this on a t-shirt!”.
The tactic has already been proven to work several times, when people post stuff like this, and then report the shops that steal it to Disney’s legal team. It’s a clever way to leverage Disney’s lawyers to protect regular artists who couldn’t afford to sue all these random websites.
Regardless of what it says on the image this is 100% a parody.
I think maybe you’re out of the loop here. This is part of a trend to screw over bots that automatically steal art and sell it on random sites. That’s why others are commenting stuff like “I’d buy this on a t-shirt!”.
The tactic has already been proven to work several times, when people post stuff like this, and then report the shops that steal it to Disney’s legal team. It’s a clever way to leverage Disney’s lawyers to protect regular artists who couldn’t afford to sue all these random websites.
The funny thing is though, I would buy this on a T-shirt
Buy a transfer pencil and baking paper … and a tee shirt I guess.
Instructions unclear, baked a pencil with my dick
God damn artists are too good at their jobs
I’d buy your comment on a shirt!
Thanks. Other comments and replies have been alluding to this, but this is the only one that described the mechanism.
I understand the tactic, it’s still a parody.
It’s a parody just like this statement is false