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Anonymous
>>150323 FFS, l2/reading comphrehension. That's legal boilerplate. Stuff like that is in the contract of any online hosting service for stuff like this.
>Adobe does not claim ownership of Your Content.
You keep the copyright.
>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.
A) They can put your stuff on webpages, to, you know, show them like you intend. (Since Adobe owns the pages that form Photoshop Express, just like Flickr owns the pages on Flickr, they need your legal permission to stick photographs you upload on there. Look in other online contracts, and you'll see very similar language.)
B) In the rare event your shit doesn't suck, they can use it for promotions without paying you. The fullest extent this would probably be done is sticking your picture on their front page like Flickr does with their members' pictures. And even if they put it on a billboard in Times Square, well... amp up and show off, make it impossible to ignore.
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