Copyright/Intellectual Property Question
So, I know this seems to crop up once in a while, but there never seems to be a clear answer...
Quite often my and other's photos get rejected as Copyright Infringement or Intellectual Property Violations. Most of the time these are completely correct and justified. Fair enough right, we'd be angry if someone stole our photos too.
However, what confuses me (and I think other people) is that you can search for the same subject matter in Stock and find the same images listed, and not even as editorial use only. As an example, I found images of Singapore's paper currency (current paper currency) which is absolutely not permitted for commercial use, and probably very strict about what editorial use also. I haven't taken any currency shots ever, so its not like I'm jealous, but I'm curious about why some things like that are allowed, and some aren't? Is it just an error on the review process?
If you download these as a customer, there's no property/model release attached, but obviously it's not Adobe who would get the take-down notice and possible legal action. So how does that work?
My curiosity is also if one of my photos slips under the wire unnoticed as a copyrighted piece of material, then who is culpable for litigation? Adobe? The trained reviewer? The contributor?
I'm just curious is all.
