This is from Flickr's blog. Since their policy is that YOU own YOUR photos, then Google/Blogger MUST remove the image(s) of me that "The Improper Adoptee"—Marilyn McAboy—downloaded from my Flickr site and uploaded to her asinine blog. I filed a DMCA against Marilyn McAboy pertaining to the image(s) the sick woman stole and used, but so far they have not taken the image(s) from her Blogger or removed them from her Picasa albums.
I'm refiling a DMCA today. Marilyn McAboy thinks she is above the law because she is an adoptee. I kid you not; adoption is this woman's excuse for every violation against someone else she tries to get away with. She blames her victims. It's always the "poor Improper Adoptee" and then non-stop blabbering about deluded nonsense and fabricated tall tales of abuse towards her, all the while she is harassing and harming others—since 2008 at the least.
May 13, 2011
At Flickr, your photos are always yours
There has been some discussion on the web as of late about image ownership on photo sites so we wanted to take a moment to address this on Flickr.
Here at Flickr, we’re all about helping you share your photos. That’s what photos are for. Sharing and remembering what you see, with the people that matter to you.
We feel very strongly that sharing online shouldn’t mean giving up rights to your photos. Our Terms of Service clearly spell out that Flickr/Yahoo! doesn’t own the photos that you upload. You, as a member, maintain all ownership rights to the photos that you upload to Flickr. Our Terms of Service allow us to,
“use, distribute, reproduce, modify, adapt, publicly perform and publicly display such Content on the Yahoo! Services solely for the purpose for which such Content was submitted or made available.” (Please see Section 9b of the Terms of Service for the full text.)
This grants Flickr the right to provide the Flickr service, i.e. create the small, medium, and large sizes, display your photos on the site, etc. It doesn’t mean that we own them. When you upload your photos to Flickr, you retain the rights to your images.
In fact, when you upload to Flickr you set the kind of license that you want to apply to the photos, ‘All Rights Reserved’ is the default, or you can select one of the many flavors of Creative Commons licenses. The choice is yours and you maintain control over how your photo can be used by others. If you want to make your photo available for use by everybody in the world, license it using Getty Images, or to license it to a fancy magazine, it’s up to you.
Changing the settings for your photos is as easy as pie. Next to each photo you’ll see the license and settings for each photo. Don’t like what you see? It’s simple to change it in a couple of clicks.
With the ability to share directly to Facebook and Twitter while maintaining your ownership, Flickr is an ideal hub for your photos on the web, where you can upload once and share everywhere.
After all, they’re your photos, and we at Flickr want to help you share them however, whenever and with whoever you choose without giving up your rights.
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