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I'm pretty sure I'm just quitting, because it takes them three days to tell you that your batch of photos are regected without telling you why, and expecting other photographers to tell you why for free and I think it's an AI, not a real person, a real person would have been able to tell the different between my elvis figurine on a table, which I clearly stated in the title and a real person. I did learn yesterday that you can't post pictures of products or well know toys until people have downloaded you 100 times.
Hmm. You can certainly quit if you find Adobe's rules too tiresome many people do.
But "it takes them three days to tell you that your batch of photos are regected" - sounds fast. But I don't see how this proves it's an AI??
" without telling you why, " There's always a reason. Just read it.
"real person would have been able to tell the different between my elvis figurine on a table," do they say you need a model release, or an IP release? Do you understand the difference?
" I did learn yesterday
...Elvis' likeness is protected by the family estate. It comes under the legal heading of Personality Rights.
...
@The Real Prince Club wrote:
I'm pretty sure I'm just quitting, because it takes them three days to tell you that your batch of photos are regected without telling you why, and expecting other photographers to tell you why for free and I think it's an AI, not a real person, a real person would have been able to tell the different between my elvis figurine on a table, which I clearly stated in the title and a real person. I did learn yesterday that you can't post pictures of products or well kno
It has nothing to do with how many times you have had downloaded. You always need a property release.
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Hmm. You can certainly quit if you find Adobe's rules too tiresome many people do.
But "it takes them three days to tell you that your batch of photos are regected" - sounds fast. But I don't see how this proves it's an AI??
" without telling you why, " There's always a reason. Just read it.
"real person would have been able to tell the different between my elvis figurine on a table," do they say you need a model release, or an IP release? Do you understand the difference?
" I did learn yesterday that you can't post pictures of products or well know toys until people have downloaded you 100 times." You really don't seem to get the idea of IP...
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Elvis' likeness is protected by the family estate. It comes under the legal heading of Personality Rights.
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@The Real Prince Club wrote:
I'm pretty sure I'm just quitting, because it takes them three days to tell you that your batch of photos are regected without telling you why, and expecting other photographers to tell you why for free and I think it's an AI, not a real person, a real person would have been able to tell the different between my elvis figurine on a table, which I clearly stated in the title and a real person. I did learn yesterday that you can't post pictures of products or well know toys until people have downloaded you 100 times.
A) this is stated in the contributor's manual. And even an Elvis figurine needs a model release signed by...Elvis himself. That are the rules.
B) there are real humans refusing your pictures.
C) you get an indication on the refusal reason. Adobe does not have the time and the resources to give you an extensive memo on the refusal. Vetting would take months instead of days and cost a fortune. Contributors are supposed to know how to prepare the assets and vetting is done for providing stock customers securly with high quality assets and not to make contributors happy.
D) if your pictures show well known objects, a potential buyer risks IP and copyright claims. You have either a property release for this or you can't submit.
If you are new to stock, you should consider these resources: https://helpx.adobe.com/stock/contributor/tutorials.html
Please read the contributor user manual for more information on Adobe stock contributions: https://helpx.adobe.com/stock/contributor/user-guide.html
See here for rejection reasons: https://helpx.adobe.com/stock/contributor/help/reasons-for-content-rejection.html
and especially quality and technical issues: https://helpx.adobe.com/stock/contributor/help/quality-and-technical-issues.html
BTW: you did hijack this thread with your unrelated thread, so I will detach this as a new entry.
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It has nothing to do with how many times you have had downloaded. You always need a property release.