Photoshop Express Terms of Use Cause Stir, Will Be Revised 111
Earlier this week, we discussed Adobe's beta launch of Photoshop Express, a free, online version of the popular image editing software. However, as a number of readers pointed out, the terms of use included language which granted Adobe a wide range of rights to any photos that were made available on the site. Now, after receiving a great deal of feedback from potential users, Adobe has stated their intent to rewrite the terms of use, as Ars Technica reports. David Morgenstern of ZDNet also notes the impending change, and briefly discusses the privacy and ownership concerns involved with content you post online.
Even if they "fix" it .. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Even if they "fix" it .. (Score:4, Insightful)
who's to say they won't change it back again at some point in the future?
Anything is possible. But what's more important is what's likely.
Adobe has really little to gain by changing it back to current incarnation of the license. They're in the business of producing and selling software, not tricking people into given them rights to sell stock photography. They won't change it back because it'd be a pretty obviously dumb business move by Adobe.
This really highlights all the problems with using someone else's equipment to host and processes personal data files.
No, it really highlights the fact that many software companies don't really understand the legal implications of hosting someones data. They likely just called up the lawyers and said "make sure we don't get burned somehow by hosting this content". The lawyers pulled out some boilerplate language and changed it around a little bit, not thinking that the guy submitting content might actually want to retain some of his rights (end users have right? Who'd have thought that!).
Not every company is trying to screw you over at every single moment. They tend to pick and choose those times carefully
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Fact is, they *are* in the business of selling stock photos.
... They'll be sued by the first guy who notices they're selling his works anyway, if they ever do. What happens next depends on the result of the lawsuit.
Not that anyone should be concerned
And every publicly owned company is trying
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Visual C++ 2008 Express Edition license terms (Score:3, Informative)
Here's the EULA. It is crystal clear from (2) that you are not permitted to offer anything you develop under an open source license. You may also be interested in the restriction on allowed runtime environment (Microsoft only). Also entertaining is the injunction that "You may not work around any technical limitations in the software."
All in all, it's the usual perfectly odious nonsense I'd expect from them.
As for enforceability: Well why don't you find out? Go mano-a-mano in court with their lawyers.
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It doesn't seem clear to me at all that you can't use the Express VC++ to write, compile, or distribute open-source applications.
Open source, in my understanding, merely requires that you distribute your source such that someone can recompile it. It does not require you to distribute the compiler with it. Nor does it require that the compiler be open source.
Thus, if your code can compile with Cygwin and VC++, but you distribute the copy you created with VC++, I don't see what the issue would be. Users
re-read with more care (Score:1, Troll)
It restricts what you are allowed to do with code you develop with this MS product. One of those prohibited things is to distribute it under an "excluded license". 2 iii) makes it clear that this refers to open source licenses (gee, wonder why?)
It doesn't matter if the same code might be compiled one day by someone else using a different compiler. By downloading this MS product, using it to develop code, and licensing it thus, you're plainly breaking these terms.
I don't believe you have to be a lawyer to
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I don't believe you have to be a lawyer to figure that out. And you don't need to be a genius to figure out why they prohibit it.
Because they think they can?
Capitalized "Distributable Code" (Score:3, Informative)
sorry, seems you're right (Score:3, Informative)
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Mod parent up, please... (Score:1)
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I would say that the EULA are not legally very enforceable, but MS could easily run a lawsuit for a year
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We need some sort of statement - not a contract like the GPL or whatever as such - which companies who care about not pissing off users with this sort of thing (or trying to steal their work by hiding non-obvious clauses in the contract) - which states something like:
Obviously just because you use this software doesn't mean we own the rights to it, any more than we'd own the rights to i
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Taking this to its logical conclusion, SaaS providers such as Google may decide that they will muscle in on user data created using Google Apps with copyright t
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Moderators: Please note (Score:1, Interesting)
Please don't reward this unhelpful type of "advocacy" in any way.
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Yeah, so IHBT, but this will be archived. I'm not playing last word.
Just use the GIMP (Score:4, Informative)
Certainly Photoshop has a few remaining strengths over the GIMP when it comes to professional editing. However, the audience that Photoshop Express is marketed too have much simpler needs, and when they might need something a bit more powerful, the GIMP can step in and help. I'm ever more delighted as I discover the power that GIMP has for photo editing on an amateur basis, and it's all free and Free.
All it really needs is a better manual--the GIMP docs are much less friendly than e.g. Beginning GIMP [amazon.com] .
Re:Just use the GIMP (Score:5, Insightful)
Regardless of the technical merits, the reality is that Photoshop has the acceptance of professionals everywhere, and that kind of inertia will be hard to overcome even if GIMP ultimately exceeds Photoshop in capability and usability. "Free" means little to people that use something as a business tool that can be written off their taxes, and which they must trust to get the job done. That said, Photoshop is hardly perfect, Adobe is an obnoxious company, and I sincerely hope that the GIMP makes it out of amateur status and truly does go head-to-head with Adobe's stuff. Sooner or later it will, I think.
Re:Just use the GIMP (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Just use the GIMP (Score:4, Insightful)
8. Offer a UI skin that is more like ps.
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Agreed... Suggestions anyone?
Maybe not. The skin isn't the problem (and changes with the gnome theme anyway. The UI functionality and layout needs some work...
Re:Just use the GIMP (Score:5, Funny)
Image
Manipulation
Program
?
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We can call it FUCK PUPPET for short.
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You laugh, but back in the early days of my career, I worked with one of the biggest UUCP mail providers in the country, and a very popular BBS program (TBBS) had a proprietary front-end called "Personal Internet Mail Processor". I spent some naive time assuming that the writers just didn't realize what that acronym meant, but then I saw their logo, which was a purple fedora with a huge feather coming out of it.
From a site that still had a reference to PIMP dating back to 1993 (BARBA magazine, issue #8)
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a physically handicapped or lame person.
a limp.
a feeble or contemptible person.
Performance and functionality issues aside, I can't even bring it up in any kind
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Re:Just use the GIMP (Score:4, Informative)
Otherwise, like you say, show them, The GIMP [gimp.org] with some good tutorials. [gimp.org]
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That said, Photoshop is hardly perfect, Adobe is an obnoxious company, and I sincerely hope that the GIMP makes it out of amateur status and truly does go head-to-head with Adobe's stuff. Sooner or later it will, I think.
Well, they might start by calling it something other than GIMP....
Which of the more common definitions do you think people associate with this fine product?
Gimp: lameness: disability of walking due to crippling of the legs or feet
Gimp: is a usually derogatory term used to refer to a (male or female) sexual submissive person, typically dressed in black leather (or rubber), often in a gimp suit, and wearing a bondage hood or mask of the same material. ...
Courtesy of http://www.google.com/searc [google.com]
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the reality is that Photoshop has the acceptance of professionals everywhere, and that kind of inertia will be hard to overcome even if GIMP ultimately exceeds
Market change of established products rarely, if ever start from the top down. It's invariably from the bottom up. There's a constant crop of people doing photo editing that don't necessarily have the $$ to buy Photoshop (and will think the online product sucks ass). Those people might just start using a free product like Gimp. Later on they get r
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Not trying to troll, I'm a detail junkie. Alex.
Re:Just use the GIMP (Score:4, Informative)
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My personal gripe with GTK, is it's choice to use non-native open/save dialogs on Windows. Alex.
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You do know that there are these things called "GTK [gnome-look.org] themes" [gnome.org] that allow you to change the look of GTK widgets?
Amazing, yeah, I know.
Re:Just use the GIMP (Score:5, Insightful)
I think the real issue is GIMPs interface is just different. It looks a lot like PaintShopPro at least used to. I was a PaintShopPro user for some time and switching to GIMP was easy.
I like the GIMP. Anyone interested in GIMP ought to just download it and try it out for themselves and see what they think. Give it some time. It always takes a while to learn a different interface. I think people would be pleasantly surprised if they would just try GIMP for a while instead of being turned off that its interface isn't the same as Photoshop's.
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GIMP? Please, come back to me when they pull their arses from their heads. All "Its just different" bullshit you shout won't change a thing.
Gimp is udder cows balls until they get their act together and get a good Useability story. Meanwhile, stay in your mamma's basement.
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the 'new hotness' is raw; meaning 16bit color (per channel). not 8 but 16.
can gimp do that? not really.
and HOW many years has it been?
believe me, I'd like to see gimp win over pshop, but if they can't convert their base over to 16bit/channel color, no serious photog is going to consider gimp.
and yes, I'm a linux/bsd user by trade, but mostly am stuck to xp JUST because of pshop/cs2 (and its plugins such as neatimage and noise ninja, that al
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16 bit sucks
Even mid range DSLRs are moving up in bits (Score:2)
Even the mid range digital SLR cameras are moving up the number of bits per sample. For example Canon's new EOS 450D [canon-europe.com]
has 14 bits per color for RAW (scroll down the the compression specs). And this is just the initial recording, not the editing steps where more is needed to avoid the errors. I wonder what their next high end camera will be like.Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
I don't use GIMP on the Mac for two reasons.
That said, I use and am satisfied with GIMP on Linux, simply because it's not that bad and there's no real alternative.
-:sigma.SB
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I'm starting to wonder... (Score:5, Insightful)
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Or, is this a case where Adobe tried to sneak one past the public and got busted
Adobe, like any entity, doesn't act as one. They might like to think they all made some big great decision about The Best Approach, but that kind of thing, if it happens, takes place over a period of time.
The most likely scenario is some group at Adobe said "we need a free product to compete with other free products, otherwise we risk being irrelevant!" The marketing people decided what features it needed, the software guys wo
Re:I'm starting to wonder... (Score:4, Insightful)
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"Do not ascribe to malice that which can be explained by incompetence". But given the track record of sooooooooo many big corporations, I think this bit of wisdom just doesn't apply here. Think about the lawyers which had to approve this. Malice or incompetence? Both?
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I'm starting to wonder if "someone at Adobe" really thought this was a bad policy?
I'm not sure why this is supposed to be such a bad policy. Has anyone here actually read the EULA in question and thought about the context?
Adobe is running a service in which people can upload photos and graphics, and part of this service allows users to put their photos into "public areas". So Adobe puts something in their EULA saying, "If you put your photos into our public area, then you're implicitly giving us licens
Adobe's other EULAs don't make sense either (Score:5, Interesting)
Adobe's not exactly known for their reasonable EULAs. Just take a look at the EULA for Adobe Reader [adobe.com]. This is software that Adobe is trying to get on all the computers it can. The license, however, permits only the installation on one primary computer and one mobile computer (note that "Permitted Number" is 1). I've gone so far as to contact Adobe customer service and ask them what's going on - this goes completely against their marketing policy. Amusingly, they send all their customer service responses via PDF over email. Their official response?
It's clear that Adobe has no intention to actually try to enforce this restriction, but it suggests that organizations with computer labs and such are supposed to negotiate a volume license with Adobe. I think the Reader license is simply boilerplate recycled from other Adobe software, but it's clear that whoever is responsible for Adobe's licenses isn't in touch with what Adobe actually wants to have regarding its licensing (at least from a marketing perspective).
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I doubt it. It sounds like Adobe just wants to maintain distribution rights. Essentially to squash anyone keeping copies to distribute. (And maybe get deals with any OEMs that want to have reader pre-installed on their computers). How many people in a computer lab, or small business read through the license of "free" software that's as common and trusted as Adobe Reader? (And would expec
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That's the whole point: the license is completely at odds with both de-facto policy by Adobe and common practice by users.
If the point was to keep peop
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If the point was to keep people from distributing copies of Reader, why not just simply add a clause that you can only re-distribute it for your own, personal use or for the internal use of your organization?
You're implying the lawyers are thinking about marketing, or the marketing people are thinking about legal implications, or hell the marketing people even KNOWING that internal re-distribution is important for many organizations (sysadmin knowledge). To understand this problem you'd really need a basic
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Basically they want you to download a fresh copy of the Reader installer each time you install it.
In a corporate environment, this makes no sense (downloading an identical binary for each computer and user).
At home, it makes even less sense, because if you install it on several of your own computers, it is not redistributing.
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Actually, I'm not even sure you can do this. I'd be curious what the law would say (if anything) about whether downloading another copy constitutes another new license, and thus another "Permitted" computer.
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But they will never enforce this. They can never prove you downloaded the same binary twice or just copied it locally.
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Photoshop.. slightly off topic (Score:4, Interesting)
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The Brand (Score:2)
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POS (Score:1)
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Express means you more quickly get to the end of the list of things it can do.
Great! (Score:2)
On a semi-related note, the choice for many people is not to buy some expensive software or use the open source equivalent, but to illegally copy the expensive software or use its open source equivalent. Open source software does fairly well competing on features and stabi
How do I even run it??? (Score:1)
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It's not really a web based service. Adobe has lied to you. But this is a category of companies they are a long term member of.
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Check that you really do have the latest flash. I got that error while using the latest flash-nonfree from Ubuntu, but it wasn't really the latest version. Go to about:plugins and check that 9.0 r115 (I think I had r45 from ubuntu before) is installed.
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It always tells me "Express Install not supported by this version of the Flash Player..." But I have the latest version of Flash for Linux installed...
There is a bug in several Linux distros (including Ubuntu) where installing the latest Flash fails silently and tells you you have the most recent when you do not. You need to install by hand. In any case, it does work if you have everything installed properly. I tested it with Flash Player 9.0.115, Firefox 3Beta4, and Ubuntu 8.04.
Homeland Security (Score:1)
They're just protecting the world from terrorists. You know those people who dupe the public into thinking that their personal information is their private information. And then they go and use it against them or, barring that, use it in a "fair use" marketing campaign and never pay for or ask the user for their permission. I believe Adobe will DO NO HARM just like all those other really cool companies with no ulterior motives that want to make the world one big hug fest.
Finally made me look (Score:2)
This fianlly made me look at the site. I thought maybe this would be something I could use for some simple picture tweaking work without having to install some very likely to be very buggy software. But nooooooooooooooooo! I have to install some piece of crapware called Flash. I guess I'm back to hosting my pictures on my own web server.
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It also seems to run better if you let the Firefox No Script plugin to allow it to run.
Paint.net (Score:1)
Riiiggghhht... (Score:2)
We reviewed the terms in context of your comments - and we agree that it currently implies things we would never do with the content.
rj
ICQ has similarly ambiguous Terms of Use for years (Score:1)
Splashup is a competitor (Score:3, Informative)
There is a service out there called Splashup: linky link [splashup.com] which offers a lot more that Adobe's offering...
Intel did this years ago... (Score:1)
Anyone remember the Intel web-based graphics editor? There was a Slashdot story, I think around 2002, about their license agreement giving them rights to everything produced with it.
Wait, 6 years ago? Who am I kidding... nobody remembers anything that old anymore. I must be making it up.
Google Terms - No Better than Photoshop Express? (Score:2, Interesting)
Don't Use It (Score:2)
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PS you left your caps lock key on.
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