8 Use of Your Content
twaddler (imported) wrote: Sat Mar 29, 2008 12:44 am
. Adobe does not claim ownership of Your Content. However, with respect to Your Content that you submit or make available for inclusion on publicly accessible areas of the Services, you grant Adobe a worldwide, royalty-free, nonexclusive, perpetual, irrevocable, and fully sublicensable license to use, distribute, derive revenue or other remuneration from, reproduce, modify, adapt, publish, translate, publicly perform and publicly display such Content (in whole or in part) and to incorporate such Content into other Materials or works in any format or medium now known or later developed.
Adobe does not claim ownership of Your Content.
All the shops do this. Adobe knows they have to garner public trust to survive. But they have lawyers.
twaddler (imported) wrote: Sat Mar 29, 2008 12:44 am
However, with respect to Your Content that you submit or make available for inclusion on publicly accessible areas of the Services,...
Notice the words "publicly accessible".
...
twaddler (imported) wrote: Sat Mar 29, 2008 12:44 am
you grant Adobe a worldwide, royalty-free, nonexclusive, perpetual, irrevocable, and fully sublicensable license to use, distribute, derive revenue or other remuneration from, reproduce, modify, adapt, publish, translate, publicly perform and publicly display such Content (in whole or in part) and to incorporate such Content into other Materials or works in any format or medium now known or later developed.
Now that's just wordy.
If they meant that there is no way in the world to protect your submissions from plunder, they should have simply said that. I agree, it really looks like Adobe wants to be able to do what they will, with no recourse to the poster.
Anything you send off into the ether is just gone. There are few laws that govern the Internet, and say what you want, no "Copyright", "Watermark", or signature is going to stop someone, if they want to do something with your 'work'. If pictures are to be protected, post them on on your own site, processed with your own programs, and 'code' them out of unwanted Copying and manipulation. (Ever been to a porn site and tried to copy a pretty picture?) :-\
We had something similar to this scenario with HP photshare 'ware' at work but don't allow it's use any longer. Everything is processed at home base, sent in secure packets, and protected by the website.
Look up the FAQs on sharing sites like HP, Yahoo, Google (communities), Youtube etc., and you will find similar cautions about posting what you would expect to be kept private. None are worded like the above statements though. I caution people about Google and Yahoo every day. They'll take your stuff and keep it forever, but don't tell you they'll automatically get sublicense to profit off it, if they want to. They have a record of everything ever sent through their servers, and it's not protected from 'accidental dissimination',...(

another forum / topic).
Todays younger PC users have blinders on to the real world. It's getting to be a 'connected world' that isn't sinister. They spend so much time in front of the 'machine', they forget that there is bad and good to the 'net'. When their privacy is squandered, they complain. Ergo, the wordy statements.
I hope Adobe gets their words right. I'd hate to think they fell in line with Yahoo and Google about "public" privacy.
