ChiSoxKeith
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Mar 16, 2010
- Messages
- 2,174
So I've never done a photobook before and I want to put together one from my most recent trip. Trying to do a little bit more than the basic layouts I bought some Disney themed Digital scrapbooking kits from a person online. I got the stuff in the mail yesterday and I don't know if I should be angry, disappointed, or amused.
It appears that the seller simply bought some Disney stickers and other themed paper at a scrapbooking store, scanned them in on the computer, and are reselling the scans as CDs.
Ok, shame on me for buying it, that's not why I'm mad.
When I opened the package, there was a sticker over the CD admonishing me to not copy what was on the disc for anything other than my own personal use. That the seller did not grant me a commercial license for the images / scrapbooking pages on the disc. Then on the disc, in the root folder and every other folder on the disc were .txt files with the same admonision and an image file that had the warnings.
But these are pirated images! Clearly the person is not an authorized Disney partner, and they have the guts to warn me not to pirate their pirated imagery!
This brings up a similar situation (and here's where it's more photography related) when I went to my Aunt's house. She had some shots taken of her grandkids (both born this year) and the rest of the family. The photographer provided preview images on a disc via a slideshow. There were HUGE watermarks over every image to preven my Aunt from copying the images, but then the photographer has music playing over the slideshow. I'm FAIRLY certain that the photographer did not get licensed music rights from a handful of top 40 country artists for distribution on this DVD.
I just never like hypocrisy. If you're going to sell your images and your work, AND you're going to go overboard trying to ensure your stuff doesn't get pirated, DON'T go out and steal other people's stuff in the process.
It appears that the seller simply bought some Disney stickers and other themed paper at a scrapbooking store, scanned them in on the computer, and are reselling the scans as CDs.
Ok, shame on me for buying it, that's not why I'm mad.
When I opened the package, there was a sticker over the CD admonishing me to not copy what was on the disc for anything other than my own personal use. That the seller did not grant me a commercial license for the images / scrapbooking pages on the disc. Then on the disc, in the root folder and every other folder on the disc were .txt files with the same admonision and an image file that had the warnings.
But these are pirated images! Clearly the person is not an authorized Disney partner, and they have the guts to warn me not to pirate their pirated imagery!
This brings up a similar situation (and here's where it's more photography related) when I went to my Aunt's house. She had some shots taken of her grandkids (both born this year) and the rest of the family. The photographer provided preview images on a disc via a slideshow. There were HUGE watermarks over every image to preven my Aunt from copying the images, but then the photographer has music playing over the slideshow. I'm FAIRLY certain that the photographer did not get licensed music rights from a handful of top 40 country artists for distribution on this DVD.
I just never like hypocrisy. If you're going to sell your images and your work, AND you're going to go overboard trying to ensure your stuff doesn't get pirated, DON'T go out and steal other people's stuff in the process.



