Wah she is getting more publicity than she has ask for she is featured in todays Newpaper

YOU'RE a model. You do a photo shoot.
After that, you sign some papers involving the pictures' copyright.
It's something called a model release agreement.
What it does is spell out the terms and conditions for the use of your pictures.
You think that's that.
But weeks, months or even years later, you see your pictures in a publication you didn't expect the pictures to end up in.
You're shocked. How could they? Especially when you've never given them permission to use the pictures?
That's the situation Singaporean freelance model Nikki found herself in.
POSTER GIRL
Nikki, who's the poster girl for an ongoing Aids awareness campaign by Action for Aids (AFA), got an SMS from a friend on Tuesday noon alerting her that she had made it to the cover of this month's Maxim magazine (above).
'I thought he was kidding. I thought 'How could it be? I never did any shoots for them',' said Nikki, 23.
She asked us not to reveal her real name, but to use the name she goes by in the AFA campaign, which encourages people to call a hotline containing a safe-sex message.
Nikki's case highlights the issue facing models: How much control do models have over their pictures?
Just two days ago, The New Paper ran a report on Russian tennis star Anastasia Myskina, 24, who sued unsuccessfully when a Russian magazine published topless pictures she said were meant for 'private use' only.
She said she had agreed to the pictures on the condition that they would never see the light of day, but the US judge ruled that the verbal assurance she says the photographer gave her did not override the release form she signed.
Nikki, too, was unhappy that her photos were splashed in a five-page photo spread because she said she wasn't informed about it nor had she given her approval.
But AFA, which spoke on behalf of PR agency Weber Shandwick and advertising agency Foote Cone & Belding (FCB), said Nikki had signed a model release agreement which allows AFA to use her photographs and any campaign material in part or whole in connection with the campaign.
Maxim also says it has no responsibility to inform her because the magazine had obtained the photos from FCB, which is the proper channel.
Still, Nikki, who's studying accountancy in a private school, said she's peeved.
'It's very shocking to wake up one day and find that you're the cover girl for a men's magazine,' she said.
She complained that in the AFA campaign, the photos were cropped or hidden by text to cover some 'over-revealing' parts but the magazine didn't do so.
She also took issue with the quotes that accompanied her pictures, saying: 'The quotes made it seem like I'm their model and had posed and spoken to them. But I didn't do so.'
She said she had contacted lawyer Thomas Tham from Thomas Tham & Co to seek legal advice.
She has also obtained a copy of the model release agreement, signed last November with Shooting Gallery Productions - a photography studio engaged by FCB to shoot her photos.
She showed us the agreement but refused to give us a copy, saying it was private.
Her agreement said that her photos were meant for the AFA campaign.
'This is a men's magazine and the photo spread is not really related to the Aids-awareness campaign,' she insisted.
But AFA disagreed, saying that the Maxim article was part of AFA's ongoing Aids awareness campaign...............