Artcow Matt Furie - greasy, delusional furry porn artist who really hates the meme he created, litigious ANTIFA


Our lord Kek merely used him as an unwitting pawn so that his life may have a purpose. He was a vessel to bring about the new prophet of our times, Pepe the Frog.

However as a mortal he was easily corrupted, and he turned to the dark side acting much like Judas did in the Christian Bible. He tried to kill the prophet to stop his message, but the lord of chaos was too powerful, and thus Furie had failed.

No matter what he or his (((masters))) try to do they can't control the deity that has been awakened by the repeating digits.
 
I think some of his art has a bizarre and curious quality to it. The kind you tend to find in independent and outsider comic zines.

He really should've just ignored or laughed off the whole pepe fiasco, though. It never really had anything to do with comic since the beginning. It was just a funny looking face/expression that could be easily edited. No one ever really cared where it came from or what the intention of the character originally was.
 
Lots of creators lose control of the perception of their characters once they enter public consciousness. He's can be mad about Pepe being an alt-right meme or he could just suck it up and realise his art has had a bigger impact than it really should have given the shitty zine origins of Boys Club - something most artists never achieve.
 
Maybe he killed off Pepe because he got a ton of hate mail from SJWs. They tend to freak out over anything and getting constant butthurt spam in your inbox must get tiring, right? For instance, they forced Zara to stop selling a skirt with an image of a frog on it because it vaguely resembled Pepe:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/zara-pepe-the-frog-skirt_us_58f7592ae4b029063d356362
https://www.glamour.com/story/zara-skirt-pepe-the-frog

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That's how petty these people are.
 
Yeah, he lives in Commiefornia around a bunch of leftist "Artists", SJWs, and anti-Trumpers. They saw the frog that Furie brags about creating on various /pol/ memes, plastered all over /r/The_Donald, and being tweeted by Trump.

So they turned on Furie for "Allowing" that to happen. And Furie gave in to their peer pressure/whining/autistic screeching, thus leading him into his current situation.

He basically let himself get guilted/shamed into all this because he's a dumb cuck who is DESPERATE to be on tge "Fuck drumph!" bandwagon.
 
You know your politics have gone too far when you have to censor "Pepe"

People might otherwise get triggered, and there are probably people who automatically block anyone who says "Pepe," apparently unaware it's a common name among South Americans and even some Africans.
 
People might otherwise get triggered, and there are probably people who automatically block anyone who says "Pepe," apparently unaware it's a common name among South Americans and even some Africans.

No it's okay, we get to publicly execute anyone with that name now, just like people with last names Lynch and Lee.
 
It's the old classic "don't feed the troll" that people learn on their first day on the internet.

To be honest everyone hears it on the first day, but there are those who only truly learn it after being horrified by seeing their first images of real-life gore and scat-porn.


People might otherwise get triggered, and there are probably people who automatically block anyone who says "Pepe," apparently unaware it's a common name among South Americans and even some Africans.

That also hampers the free discussion of second-tier Looney Tunes characters.
 
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Matt Furie is in the news again, with a fluff piece from Vice bragging about how he's having a meltdown harder than a DeviantArtist/Furry who slapped 4000 "Do Not Steal" watermarks on his art.

Pepe the Frog creator Matt Furie has made good on his threat to "aggressively enforce his intellectual property."

The artist's lawyers have taken legal action against the alt-right. They have served cease and desist orders to several alt-right personalities and websites including Richard Spencer, Mike Cernovich, and the r/the_Donald subreddit. In addition, they have issued Digital Millennium Copyright Act takedown requests to Reddit and Amazon, notifying them that use of Pepe by the alt-right on their platforms is copyright infringement. The message is to the alt-right is clear—stop using Pepe the Frog or prepare for legal consequences.

Furie originally created Pepe as a non-political character for his Boy's Club comic, but Pepe later became an internet meme and during the 2016 US presidential election the alt-right movement appropriated the frog in various grotesque and hateful memes.

At the end of August, Furie's lawyers reached a settlement with Eric Hauser—the former assistant principal in Texas who appropriated Pepe's image for use in an Islamophobic children's book. Furie's lawyers forced Hauser to stop selling the book and made him donate his profits to the Council on American-Islamic Relations.

When Hauser agreed to settle out of court, I spoke with Furie's lawyers who told me they would use the Hauser settlement as a springboard to go after anyone else who profited from or misused Pepe. It appears they've made good on that promise.

Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr LLP continues to represent Furie pro-bono, and recently told me that it has taken the first steps to prying Pepe loose from the hands of the alt-right.

"[Furie] was very serious when he said that we wanted to make clear that Pepe was not the property of the alt-right and couldn't be used by the alt-right," Louis Tompros, one of Furie's intellectual property lawyers, told me. "But actions speak louder than words and we wanted to make sure we were backing up that statement against entities that were misappropriating the Pepe character and image. That's what we've been doing over the past few weeks."

To that end, Tompros and his team have taken the first steps towards dismantling the alt-right's stranglehold on Pepe. They've served a cease and desist letter to Richard Spencer's Altright.com, noting the specific places where Spencer and his team have used Pepe in violation of Furie's copyright. Pepe is all over Spencer's site and is the mascot for his podcast, Alt-Right Politics.

"We've asked them to take them down," Tompros said. "That hasn't happened yet, but they're very much on notice. We plan to take action if they don't."

Tompros and team have also gone after alt-right figure Baked Alaska, serving cease and desist letters to him and DMCA notices to Amazon, Twitter and his other online social media spaces. According to the lawyers, they also got Amazon to stop selling his book, Meme Magic: Secrets Revealed, which used Pepe on its cover. Meme Magic is currently not available on Amazon.com, but a used copy was for sale on Amazon.co.uk at the time of publishing.

"Google Play has stopped selling his Build the Wall: The Game for the same reason. It actually advertised special guest appearance from Pepe and had him popping up if you achieved certain things in the game," Tompros said. Previously, Apple had refused to publish the game until it removed Pepe the Frog. Apple has a blanket ban against Pepe the frog that it has enforced against multiple app creators.

"Mike Cernovich had a number of different uses of Pepe but most notably had this video he was publicising through his Facebook and YouTube that was a 3D version of Pepe dancing with Hillary Clinton reading aloud sections of her new book," Tompros said. "That's an unauthorized use of Pepe and we've notified him."

Tompros told me that large entities such as Amazon and Google have been the most compliant so far. Stamping out the multiple vendors peddling Pepe mech on Amazon will be difficult, but the team has already succeeded in removing several shirts from the market, including the one worn by Morris May when he pepper sprayed a transgender activist in early September.

Amazon, Reddit, Twitter, Google, YouTube, Mike Cernovich, Baked Alaska, and Richard Spencer did not immediately respond to request for comment.

DMCA takedowns have become a popular way for media companies to strike back against social media influencers they don't like for a variety of reasons, including reasons that go beyond mere copyright infringement. Earlier this month, video game developer Campo Santo served a DMCA notice to popular YouTuber Pewdiepie in response to the latter's use of racial slur during his show.

Furie's lawyers have sent DMCAs to Reddit, and have also used the site's internal formal reporting procedures to reign in the popular r/The_Donald subreddit. The online community is one of the the alt-right's most popular gathering places and makes liberal use of Pepe the Frog. A giant Pepe the Frog dominates a quarter of the screen for Redditors who haven't subscribed to the subreddit. You have to click him—and thereby subscribe to r/The_Donald—to make him go away.

As of this reporting, the giant Pepe remains, but Tombros told me that they'd only contacted Reddit Friday. "My suspicion is that Reddit will take that down," he said.

If Reddit or r/the_donald's moderators don't police the use of Pepe in the subreddit, Furie's lawyers are prepared to file lawsuits and fight to free Pepe from the clutches of the alt-right in a court of law. "If necessary, we expect to bring a lawsuit for copyright infringement," Tompros said. "I want to make sure that people have enough time to comply. The goal here is not to initiate lawsuits. The goal is to get the misuse of Pepe to stop. I'd rather do that through people complying with the cease and desist notices. But we're certainly ready, willing, and able to bring suits to follow up for the folks who do not comply."

In the past, the alt-right has attacked its enemies with vicious doxing and online abuse campaigns. Tompros and his team understand that's a risk, but it's one they're willing to take.

"We're doing what we think is the right thing," he said. "We understand that we're dealing with serious folks here and we want to make clear to them that we're serious too. We're not going to stand for this."

The legal battle with Hauser has give the team both hope and precedent. "It shows we're serious," Tompros said. "It shows the copyright has been enforced before...as we have more and more of these actions where we're successfully able to remove misuse of the Pepe image and character, they'll build upon each other. I'm hopeful we'll reach a place where this stops, where the alt-right realizes it's too much trouble dealing with us to be misappropriating this character and they move on."

Furie has continued to avoid speaking with the media about Pepe, but Tompros told me the win against Hauser lifted his spirits. "That's been powerful for him," the lawyer said. "He's ready and wants to keep up the fight and wants to take down anyone who's using his character. He's also received words of support from fans and others. He's taking comfort in that."

"We're going to keep on fighting," Tompros said. "I hope we're doing what others would do when it's there to turn to stand up for the good guys."

As of this writing, Pepe shirts were still available on Amazon—though it seemed there were far fewer available than normal—and Pepe was still visible on Cernovich and Spencer's sites as well as r/The_Donald subreddit.

Correction: This story originally stated that Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr LLP sent DMCA notices to Twitter and YouTube. It sent those notices to Reddit, Google Play, and Amazon. Motherboard regrets the error.
 
Had a feeling this one was going to go full cow and I'm not at all surprised it's happened. Imagine being so delusional that you sue a subreddit.

In the past, the alt-right has attacked its enemies with vicious doxing and online abuse campaigns. Tompros and his team understand that's a risk, but it's one they're willing to take.
Let's see how willing they are, @Ride @zedkissed60 @Dynastia who wants this one?
 
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