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Participant
October 1, 2022
Answered

My photos are rejected for ridiculous reasons

  • October 1, 2022
  • 7 replies
  • 495 views

I was rejected due to intellectual property disclaimer and quality issue. There are no intellectual property objects in the photos I took. There is a mausoleum dedicated to society.

This topic has been closed for replies.
Correct answer jacquelingphoto2017

Hi @Nik98 ,

There are at least three people in the photo that you must get release from. Once the person can recognize himself in an image it requires an MR. Here is one recognizable person, possibly 2.

I suggest in the future you upload the quality photo you submit. Looking at this photo I suspect there's also quality issue, but since I do not know what you did to adjust the quality I refrain from commenting on them. You can however follow the guidelines at the links at my comment here to do further assessments on your own.

Best wishes

Jacquelin

7 replies

jacquelingphoto2017
Community Expert
Community Expert
October 2, 2022

Hi @Nik98 ,

All your photos are underexposed, not in sharp focus and noisy. The photo with the boats has color fringing. You must zoom your image to between 100 and 200% to find quality issue.

For buildings to be accepted without a property release it must be clear that it is a part of public space or landscape and must not be the main focus of the capture. The writing on the building will also attract IP rejection. You will benefit a great deal from Learning what will attract IP rejections. Be sure to read all the referred links.

It is good learning what Adobe is looking for.

Here are some further tips that you'll benefit from. I suggest you read-up on all the topic on both pages.

Regards

Jacquelin

 

 

Abambo
Community Expert
Community Expert
October 2, 2022

The reasons are, as others laid out, not ridiculous, but very founded. The mausoleum needs a property release, or you need to prove that the property release is not necessary. In addition, there are recognizable people on your pictures. The boat has sign on it that need to be edited out. In Addition to what Nancy showed:  But the moderator refused on the first error he or she found. The mausoleum would also earn refusal because the black and white processing and the boat has heavy quality problems. There is a lot of noise, and I've seen chromatic aberration. I didn't check the exposure, but I would expect to find this picture underexposed.

ABAMBO | Hard- and Software Engineer | Photographer
Nik98Author
Participant
October 2, 2022

This photo was rejected for "model release". (I lowered the image quality to upload)

jacquelingphoto2017
Community Expert
jacquelingphoto2017Community ExpertCorrect answer
Community Expert
October 2, 2022

Hi @Nik98 ,

There are at least three people in the photo that you must get release from. Once the person can recognize himself in an image it requires an MR. Here is one recognizable person, possibly 2.

I suggest in the future you upload the quality photo you submit. Looking at this photo I suspect there's also quality issue, but since I do not know what you did to adjust the quality I refrain from commenting on them. You can however follow the guidelines at the links at my comment here to do further assessments on your own.

Best wishes

Jacquelin

Nancy OShea
Community Expert
Community Expert
October 1, 2022

IP rejections.

 

 

 

Nancy O'Shea— Product User & Community Expert
Legend
October 1, 2022

Anitkabir was completed in 1953, it is the dominant element of your photos, so clearly that is an IP rejection if you don't have a release. It is not ridiculous, you are breaking the rules. Property release and protection guidelines for Adobe Stock The rules are stricter than the law, and you cannot use other accepted pictures to prove anything, because they may have had releases.

Nancy OShea
Community Expert
Community Expert
October 1, 2022

To add what's already been said about watermarks, etc.. I wouldn't waste time submitting B&W photos.  Stock Customers want full color.  If the project designer specifies B&W, customers can easily grayscale a color image.

 

Also read about known image restrictions.  Some landmarks & buildings are protected and can't be used for commercials/advertising.  

https://helpx.adobe.com/stock/contributor/help/known-image-restrictions.html

 

 

Nancy O'Shea— Product User & Community Expert
ClaudePhoto
Inspiring
October 1, 2022

I know the reasons are sometimes far-fetched. At the same time this mausoleum has been photographed millions of times…forget and move on. The same for your boat. It is a scene that has been photographed thousands of times. To pass the pill, I'm going to tell you an anecdote that happened to me. On a Stock site I submitted a photo where it was written Parisian. Also I reversed it. It was refused to me because of the word Parisian and of problem of sharpness and because one could read the word on a reflection of bodywork. He told me that Parisien is a protected name. I reversed the photo and it was accepted. So my advice if this happens to you do not insist. Save your energy to take beautiful original photos with subjects that will appeal to buyers. As for the one that is not accepted, make a beautiful photo album for you and your loved ones.

Jill_C
Community Expert
Community Expert
October 1, 2022

There are identifying markings on the boat in the first image. In the remainder of the images, there are many people, some recognizable. The standard is that if a person would be able to recognize themselves in your image, you need a model release from them to use the image commercially.

You also have your watermark on the images, which is not allowed by Adobe Stock.

Jill C., Forum Volunteer