Class-Action Lawsuit Goes After Instagram Terms of Service Changes
New submitter Alex Belits writes "Users of the Instagram image sharing service owned by Facebook filed a class action against Facebook for the recent change in Terms of Service."
The changes that were supposed to take effect on January 16, 2013 declared for Facebook an unlimited right to use and license users' photos, added an arbitration requirement for legal disputes, and more. Guess the lawyers involved here weren't impressed enough by Facebook's hasty back-pedaling on this front; the company did explicitly disclaim ownership interest in the uploaded photos after a wave of complaints, but left in place certain other clauses in the new terms.
It wasn't even back-pedaling, just word soup. They never claimed ownership, just a license to use them as they wished, and their later statement never went back on THAT.
They can simply refuse the new term of service, and their photo will not be covered by the new TOS meaning instagram/FB won't be able to use them anyway. Naturally they lose usage of their photo but hey, so is life when you trust some random company with your stuff when you are obviously the "product" of that company. But i see no cause to sue the lawsuit will prolly be rejected at judge level.
http://imgs.xkcd.com/comics/instagram.png
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If you don't agree with the terms, don't use it. No one's forcing you to.
I don't have, and never will have, a Facebook account due to privacy concerns (data mining, etc.), and concerns over use/abuse of users' writing/photos/whatever.
Anyone can use your photos/whatever for whatever they want - the general consensus seems to be that if it's on the internet, it's free to use. ZDNet got called out on a photo lifted from another website in a recent article/blog entry in the comments to that article. The author/blogger's response was 'Oh, is that where that came from?' I don't agree in any way with big media's take on copyright, but at least give credit, or better yet, ask permission, for something you're using.
If you don't want people using your photos, don't post them publicly on the internet. Try this: open a browser window to images.google.com, and drag a photo from another website onto the input field. Look at how many places it shows up! Try it with some of your Facebook photos - you may be surprised!
When you're dead, you don't know you're dead. It only affects the people around you. Same thing when you're stupid.
When Facebook uses the content we create for free it's bad, but when we use other people's content for free RIAA is bad!
I know you're trying to make a point, but the situation isn't really comparable. For one, pirates do not claim ownership over the content, and secondly, pirates can't legally make money out of it whereas when a company imposes a ToS - change like this on its userbase they actually CAN then legally make money out of your content. That makes the whole premise of the situation quite different, with pirates mostly focusing on consuming the content themselves, and companies focusing on monetizing the content.
Not a bad comparison, though there is a difference between sharing and selling. Namely, the exchange of money. If Facebook/Instagram said your photos would be copylefted, I don't think people would object as much. But profiting from other people's work is a little shadier than just giving it away.
http://xkcd.com/1150/
Anyone who expects stuff like this for free should think twice.
Then again, anyone who uses Instagram is an idiot, but that's a different story.
If you think this then you are incredibly uneducated in matters of legal standing. I dont care what you sign. Spend more than the other guys in lawyers and you win.
Hell spend enough in lawyers and you can go on a murder spree and get away with it. American Justice is for the highest bidder. Right, Wrong, and what you agreed to has nothing to do with it.
Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
Okay, if you read the ToS, it clearly states that it is subject to change.
They can change ToS as much as they want, but are all the possible changes legal? In some countries, you can't usurp copyrighted works like this, no matter how much the site operator declares to have the right to do whatever the f**k he wants to.
Ezekiel 23:20