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Peter A Lund
Inspiring
November 30, 2022
Answered

I often see image that when I recreate them .... Property Violation

  • November 30, 2022
  • 6 replies
  • 468 views

Hey, 

 

I shot an Image of a Skyscraper in Hamburg. 

I found some pictures on adobe stock and they did not have the lable editorial. 

So I tried out to make different approaches of the same building and I got an 

Intellectual Property Disclamer. 

How can I discuss this issue without dealing with an AI? 

And is there any advice on how to get an aproval of such a building? 

Any blog or Information on this other than: you cant do this! 

thanxs 

Peter 

This topic has been closed for replies.
Correct answer Jill_C

There is no avenue to dispute a finding by the Adobe Moderators. Imagine how costly and time-consuming it would be for Adobe if they allowed every Contributor to argue about the decisions of the Moderators!!,  You can contact the building owner to try to obtain a release, but you're unlikely to be successful. The other non-Editorial images you see in Adobe could be a legacy from their acquisition of Fotolia. 

6 replies

Abambo
Community Expert
Community Expert
December 1, 2022

Who says that the images published don't have a property release? You can't know. 

ABAMBO | Hard- and Software Engineer | Photographer
Nancy OShea
Community Expert
Community Expert
December 1, 2022
Nancy O'Shea— Product User & Community Expert
Jill_C
Community Expert
Jill_CCommunity ExpertCorrect answer
Community Expert
November 30, 2022

There is no avenue to dispute a finding by the Adobe Moderators. Imagine how costly and time-consuming it would be for Adobe if they allowed every Contributor to argue about the decisions of the Moderators!!,  You can contact the building owner to try to obtain a release, but you're unlikely to be successful. The other non-Editorial images you see in Adobe could be a legacy from their acquisition of Fotolia. 

Jill C., Forum Volunteer
Ricky336
Community Expert
Community Expert
November 30, 2022

Hello,

This may be of use to you:

Known image restrictions (adobe.com)

 

Generally, you will need a release for the building if it is a well-known building.

 

WendellaBee
Inspiring
November 30, 2022

Moving to Contributor forum.

Legend
November 30, 2022

Adobe's advise is clear; you need to submit a property release. Their lawyers have made the rules, and there is NO WAY for you to talk to ANYONE about this; it would cost Adobe money to get into discussions with contributors. Moderators will accept or reject, and you cannot appeal. You see other pictures of the same building? Assume those photographers followed the rule.