ALISON PENTECOST

  • Home
  • About
  • Videos
  • Contact
514-290-2101
VoiceTalent@alisonpentecost.com

freelance contract best practices

Ripped Off: What to Do When Your Creative Work Is Used Without Permission

February 25, 2026 by AlisonP 2 Comments

Today we’re talking about what happens when your work gets taken.

Used without your permission.
Or used without proper compensation.
Or used in ways you never agreed to.

Unfortunately, these situations aren’t rare. They’re a real part of the freelance landscape — especially in creative industries.

This topic came top of mind for me after listening to a recent episode of the podcast Canadaland called “The Freelancer’s Guide to Getting Revenge When You’ve Been Ripped Off.” In it, host Jesse Brown shares a personal experience, alongside illustrator Raymond Biesinger, who talks candidly about the many times his work has been copied or misused over the course of his career.

It got me thinking about how we protect our voices, our ideas, and our work in today’s freelance world.

However, this isn’t legal advice. If you’re facing a specific situation, speak to a qualified legal professional. What I want to offer here is a way for you to think about the issue and how it might relate to the work you’re producing.

What Does “Ripped Off” Actually Mean?

Having your creative work stolen, copied, or misused hits a nerve for most freelancers. And “ripped off” can look like a lot of different things:

  • A client who simply… never pays

  • Work being reused beyond the scope of your contract

  • A logo, illustration, voiceover, or article appearing somewhere it was never licensed to appear

  • Outright IP theft — someone claiming your work as their own

From non-payment to unauthorized use, this doesn’t just happen to beginners. It happens to experienced professionals, too.

And in the age of AI, scraping tools, and instant redistribution, it’s easier than ever for work to be copied, remixed, and shared at scale — often with less clear recourse.

This doesn’t mean your work has no value.
It does mean we need to be more intentional about protecting it.

Why It Matters More Than We Admit

Getting ripped off hurts more than your feelings.

Financial impact

  • Lost income when someone uses your work for free

  • Unpaid invoices

  • Time and money spent chasing payment or correcting misuse

Emotional impact

  • Anger

  • Self-doubt

  • The sinking feeling of “Did I do something wrong?”

  • The power imbalance of being one freelancer facing a larger company

And then there’s the opportunity cost.

The time and energy you spend fighting misuse is time you’re not spending on:

  • Paid work

  • Marketing or auditioning

  • Rest and peace of mind

  • Building the business you actually want

One of the hardest questions freelancers face is:

Do I pursue this… or do I let it go?

Sometimes it’s worth pushing back:

  • When the financial impact is significant

  • When misuse is ongoing

  • When precedent matters for your long-term business

  • When a client may simply be acting out of ignorance

Other times — as frustrating as it is — letting it go protects your energy and keeps you moving forward.

There is no universal right answer. It’s a calculation that includes money, time, emotional bandwidth, and support.

Practical Protection Without Paranoia

So what can we do — realistically — to reduce how often this happens and how much damage it does?

1. Get Clear in Writing

Clear contracts matter.

Spell out:

  • Fees

  • Usage

  • Duration

  • Territory

  • Revisions

  • Payment terms

Not because you don’t trust people — but because clarity protects everyone.

2. Build Friction Into Delivery

Contracts alone aren’t enough. Add practical safeguards:

  • Watermark visual or audio work until final payment clears

  • Send low-resolution previews instead of full files

  • Deliver work in stages

  • Require a deposit — ideally 50% up front

Deposits don’t make you “difficult.”
They filter out people who were never going to pay.

3. Lean on Community

Freelancers watching each other’s backs is powerful.

  • Share red flags

  • Warn others about bad actors

  • Alert peers if you see their work used improperly

Your network isn’t just for referrals.
It’s for protection.

Responding Strategically If It Happens

If you discover your work being used without permission:

Start calm.

Often, a clear and professional message stating:

  • That the work is yours

  • How it’s being used outside the agreement

  • What you want to happen next

…is enough.

Many people don’t expect you to notice.
They don’t expect a human being behind the work.

You don’t need to threaten.
You don’t need to rant.
You need clarity, documentation, and a paper trail.

Escalate only if necessary:

  • Follow-up emails

  • Contacting a supervisor, legal department, or communications team

  • Requesting platform takedowns

And yes, there are times when legal advice is worth it:

  • Significant financial loss

  • Ongoing misuse

  • Large companies benefiting from your work

  • Situations involving serious power imbalance

Sometimes, one consultation is enough to clarify your options — even if you don’t pursue formal action.

And here’s the hardest truth:

Sometimes letting it go is also a valid business decision.

Not because it doesn’t matter.
But because your time, energy, and nervous system matter too.

Protection Isn’t Walling Yourself Off From the Evil World Beyond

It isn’t about becoming guarded or bitter.

It’s about setting yourself up so that when things go wrong — and sometimes they will — you’re not starting from zero.

You’re informed.
You’re supported.
And you’re choosing your next step on purpose.

If big tech and engineering firms reap the benefits of what they build, so should creative professionals.

Your work has value.
Protect it accordingly.


This article is based on an episode of my Freelance Fitness podcast, where I combine short workouts with honest conversations about building a sustainable creative freelance business. If you work in video production, audio production, or any creative field and want business advice without hustle culture nonsense, you’re in the right place.

Filed Under: Freelance Fitness Tagged With: businesstips, CreativeCommunity, CreativeFreelanceLife, female voice, freelance business tips, freelance contract best practices, Montreal voiceover, professional female voice talent, protecting digital content, Small Business Advice, VoiceActor

Primary Sidebar

Recent Posts

  • What To Do When It’s Not a Slow Month — It’s a Shrinking Market
  • Pas juste un mois tranquille : que faire quand ton industrie se transforme
  • Ripped Off: What to Do When Your Creative Work Is Used Without Permission
  • Vol de création en freelance : comment protéger ton travail et tes revenus
  • Distraction : quand ton attention travaille contre toi

Recent Comments

  1. AlisonP on Ripped Off: What to Do When Your Creative Work Is Used Without Permission
  2. Jessica Pineda on Ripped Off: What to Do When Your Creative Work Is Used Without Permission

Archives

  • March 2026
  • February 2026
  • January 2026
  • December 2025
  • November 2025
  • October 2025
  • September 2025
  • August 2025
  • July 2025
  • June 2025
  • May 2025

Categories

  • Freelance Fitness
  • Pigiste pas Figiste

©2026 Alison Pentecost // Voice Over Site by Voice Actor Websites

514-290-2101
VoiceTalent@alisonpentecost.com