I didn't deal directly with CMG. I had provided an image to an agency and it turned out that their client was Corning Incorporated. The image was used in an ad for sunglasses and CMG issued a "cease and desist" letter to Corning I believe. The ad agency got in touch with me since, of course, Corning wanted to know what was up. In the course of trying to figure out what I might have done wrong I found out that "rights of publicity" is what CMG was asserting as the basis for their claim on behalf of the MT Foundation. I didn't ever know the final outcome. Corning and CMG worked it out somehow - lawyer to lawyer I presume. As someone suggested earlier, it was the commercial nature of the use that set off the reaction. CMG has a section on its web site "Intellectual Property Strategies" that talks about Rights of Publicity, Trademarks and Copyright. Mark Woodhouse