Paul Francis opened this issue on Nov 08, 2009 · 66 posts
Paul Francis posted Sun, 08 November 2009 at 1:40 AM
I just bought an amazing model from Sanctum Arts, and posted a picture here in the Poser gallery that I made using it. One of the comments posted reads:
"Great render but don't use this model (or any other Sanctum Arts Model) for any commercial purpose whatsoever. They are intended for hobby use only. I regret having purchased this model for that reason, and I wish I could sell the license, but that is also forbidden by the EULA :-("
I've never heard of such an arrangement, and so have checked and re-checked the licence at Sanctum Arts, but can't find any such restriction. Am I reading it wrong, or has anyone else heard of this?
My
self-build system - Vista 64 on a Kingston 240GB SSD,
Asus P5Q
Pro MB, Quad
6600 CPU, 8 Gb Geil Black Dragon Ram, CoolerMaster HAF932 full
tower chassis, EVGA Geforce GTX 750Ti Superclocked 2 Gb,
Coolermaster V8 CPU aircooler, Enermax 600W Modular PSU, 240Gb SSD,
2Tb HDD storage, 28" LCD monitor, and more red LEDs than a grown
man really
needs.....I built it in 2008 and can't afford a new one,
yet.....!
My
Software - Poser Pro 2012, Photoshop, Bryce 6 and
Borderlands......"Catch a
r--i---d-----e-----!"
RobynsVeil posted Sun, 08 November 2009 at 1:48 AM
Had a look at their stuff - not to my taste at all. Does posting in a gallery constitute "commercial purposes" or was the comment person using your image gallery as an opportunity to vent?
Monterey/Mint21.x/Win10 - Blender3.x - PP11.3(cm) - Musescore3.6.2
Wir sind gewohnt, daß die Menschen verhöhnen was sie nicht verstehen
[it is clear that humans have contempt for that which they do not understand]
Paul Francis posted Sun, 08 November 2009 at 1:52 AM
Quote - Had a look at their stuff - not to my taste at all. Does posting in a gallery constitute "commercial purposes" or was the comment person using your image gallery as an opportunity to vent?
Dunno....I bought it to make some artwork for a commerical project; I'm sure the person posting has misread the licence. It has all the usual restrictions you would expect on not selling or distributing the actual content, but I can't find any mention of there being a restriction on your own images. I've done the sensible thing and emailed Sanctum Arts, so I should get a definitve answer hopefully!
My
self-build system - Vista 64 on a Kingston 240GB SSD,
Asus P5Q
Pro MB, Quad
6600 CPU, 8 Gb Geil Black Dragon Ram, CoolerMaster HAF932 full
tower chassis, EVGA Geforce GTX 750Ti Superclocked 2 Gb,
Coolermaster V8 CPU aircooler, Enermax 600W Modular PSU, 240Gb SSD,
2Tb HDD storage, 28" LCD monitor, and more red LEDs than a grown
man really
needs.....I built it in 2008 and can't afford a new one,
yet.....!
My
Software - Poser Pro 2012, Photoshop, Bryce 6 and
Borderlands......"Catch a
r--i---d-----e-----!"
nruddock posted Sun, 08 November 2009 at 2:26 AM
Attached Link: http://www.sanctumart.com/news.php?viewStory=8
I suspect that whoever wrote the comment was misinterpreting this paragraph :-Quote - 6. You may NOT copyright and distribute rendered still or animated images created to produce trademarks or logotypes for yours or any other Third-party comercial products.
All SANCTUM ART'S products are trademarks or registered trademarks of Sanctum Art, INC.
Other than that, the SA license is pretty much the same (but wordier) as the store license here and elsewhere (it has similarities in form to the license for Poser's included content).
Lucifer_The_Dark posted Sun, 08 November 2009 at 4:03 AM
Personally after seeing the way SA went after someone who legitimately bought one of their models because they couldn't find their name in the customer list I'd give them a miss.
If you insist on having something of theirs make sure you keep darn good records of when you bought it in case they demand you prove it.
Windows 7 64Bit
Poser Pro 2010 SR1
wolf359 posted Sun, 08 November 2009 at 4:38 AM
Quote - or was the comment person using your image gallery as an opportunity to vent?
The Most Likely Scenario.
be aware that there Exists, in this community,
A very Dedicated Cabal of Sanctumart Haters who are very Upset at the Mans Perceived Arrogance in his promotional materials.
Especially Over at the DAZ forums
So always Check things out for yourself before
Listening to some "web forum Attorney"
with an Agenda.
Cheers
Lucifer_The_Dark posted Sun, 08 November 2009 at 4:55 AM
I have no agenda, I just have a long memory.
Windows 7 64Bit
Poser Pro 2010 SR1
hborre posted Sun, 08 November 2009 at 6:43 AM Online Now!
Wolf359 has given very sound advice. Double-check with SA before committing to commercial renders. I have heard and have read certain situations where attorneys were involved pending lawsuits.
dasquid posted Sun, 08 November 2009 at 7:25 AM
Well not doing this to be an ass or anything but...
This thread
here:
http://poserpros.daz3d.com/forums/viewtopic.php?t=54287
Speaks for itself in my opinion. I know that I haven't bought anything from them since then, not sure about the others who professed their non-support but I stuck to it because I am also one of those people who use multiple names on different sites. (yeah the cost of their stuff had something to do with that as well.)
Not saying that thread should be a nail in a coffin or anything but people should read it and make up their own mind.
Gareee posted Sun, 08 November 2009 at 7:25 AM
Quote - I suspect that whoever wrote the comment was misinterpreting this paragraph :- > Quote - 6. You may NOT copyright and distribute rendered still or animated images created to produce trademarks or logotypes for yours or any other Third-party comercial products.
All SANCTUM ART'S products are trademarks or registered trademarks of Sanctum Art, INC.
Other than that, the SA license is pretty much the same (but wordier) as the store license here and elsewhere (it has similarities in form to the license for Poser's included content).
I dunno.. thats pretty clear: you cannot use renders of their content for ANY commercial use, period. No wiggle room.. just NO.
Way too many people take way too many things way too seriously.
Doran posted Sun, 08 November 2009 at 8:18 AM
Lucifer_the_Dark is correct. I too remember some of those witch hunts that SA conducted.
hborre is also correct in that SA has pursued legal actions against many, though they were the party that were found to be in error.
Wolf359 is correct in that there are a lot of SA haters out there but he doesn't seem to have a solid clue as to why. SA has a very bad reputation for a reason.
Krewz posted Sun, 08 November 2009 at 8:35 AM
Quote - Well not doing this to be an ass or anything but...
This threadhere:
http://poserpros.daz3d.com/forums/viewtopic.php?t=54287Speaks for itself in my opinion. I know that I haven't bought anything from them since then, not sure about the others who professed their non-support but I stuck to it because I am also one of those people who use multiple names on different sites. (yeah the cost of their stuff had something to do with that as well.)
Not saying that thread should be a nail in a coffin or anything but people should read it and make up their own mind.
Wow, that does make up my mind. SA has some great looking models but I'm not going anywhere near them if that's how they do business.
artdude41 posted Sun, 08 November 2009 at 8:47 AM
i can fully understand his concern about redistribution of his product in terms of piracy , but selling the product and then telling you what you can and cannot do with the rendering you took of it , is just ridiculous in my opinion , imagine Nikon or Canon selling a camera and then telling you , you cant sell the photographs you took with it .
his work is indeed top quality ,but having a rigid(insane) licencing agreement is just going to alienate (if it hasn't already )the honest poser users . because iam guessing it sure has hell hasn't stopped his products from being pirated thus far .
Doran posted Sun, 08 November 2009 at 8:54 AM
artdude41... I LOVE YOUR AVATAR!
Paul Francis posted Sun, 08 November 2009 at 9:10 AM
Blimey; I appear to have opened up a right can of hornet's nests here.....thanks for the sage advice....still awaiting a reply from Sanctum Arts themselves by email though. I'm holding off using it for the commercial projects I had in mind (some game art and a magazine article) until I get a definitive answer.
My
self-build system - Vista 64 on a Kingston 240GB SSD,
Asus P5Q
Pro MB, Quad
6600 CPU, 8 Gb Geil Black Dragon Ram, CoolerMaster HAF932 full
tower chassis, EVGA Geforce GTX 750Ti Superclocked 2 Gb,
Coolermaster V8 CPU aircooler, Enermax 600W Modular PSU, 240Gb SSD,
2Tb HDD storage, 28" LCD monitor, and more red LEDs than a grown
man really
needs.....I built it in 2008 and can't afford a new one,
yet.....!
My
Software - Poser Pro 2012, Photoshop, Bryce 6 and
Borderlands......"Catch a
r--i---d-----e-----!"
Doran posted Sun, 08 November 2009 at 9:10 AM
artdude... Why didn't I catch your gallery sooner. I saw you Avatar and though that I would catch a couple Judge Dredd pics but, WOW, what a gallery. If the rest of you haven't seen his work go and check it out.
TZORG posted Sun, 08 November 2009 at 9:10 AM
Quote - > Quote - I suspect that whoever wrote the comment was misinterpreting this paragraph :- > Quote - 6. You may NOT copyright and distribute rendered still or animated images created to produce trademarks or logotypes for yours or any other Third-party comercial products.
All SANCTUM ART'S products are trademarks or registered trademarks of Sanctum Art, INC.
Other than that, the SA license is pretty much the same (but wordier) as the store license here and elsewhere (it has similarities in form to the license for Poser's included content).
I dunno.. thats pretty clear: you cannot use renders of their content for ANY commercial use, period. No wiggle room.. just NO.
All those words seem to create the wiggle room rather than remove it. You are free to "copyright and distribute rendered ... images" if you're not producing "trademarks or logotypes for ... commercial products."
It's not the tool used, it's the tool using it
TZORG posted Sun, 08 November 2009 at 9:16 AM
In other words: They don't want you to render a pic of their werewolf's head and use it to sell dish soap. (i.e. in a form that could be trademarked)
It's not the tool used, it's the tool using it
Doran posted Sun, 08 November 2009 at 9:21 AM
"... release the power of werewolves on those tough stains" :)
bantha posted Sun, 08 November 2009 at 9:31 AM
It would be nice if you could post here when you got an answer, Paul. More speculation most defeninitely doesn't help.
A ship in port is safe;
but that is not what ships are built for.
Sail out to sea and do new things.
-"Amazing
Grace" Hopper
Avatar image of me done by Chidori.
TZORG posted Sun, 08 November 2009 at 10:06 AM
An answer would only tell you what SA meant it to say.
It's not the tool used, it's the tool using it
Acadia posted Sun, 08 November 2009 at 10:08 AM
Quote - I just bought an amazing model from Sanctum Arts, and posted a picture
Good luck with that!
Be prepared for some pretty nasty emails from SanctumArtKitty if you decide to ever use one of those models! There are threads at pretty much every poser site out there with someone saying that they were accused of stealing the model and that if they didn't provide proof of ownership through names, address, phone number, place purchased, invoice number etc, that they would be taken to court.
Very nasty way to run a business if you want my opinion. Personally, the models aren't up my alley, but even if they were I'd look to another vendor, such as Sixus1, and save myself a huge headache.
"It is good to see ourselves as
others see us. Try as we may, we are never
able to know ourselves fully as we
are, especially the evil side of us.
This we can do only if we are not
angry with our critics but will take in good
heart whatever they might have to
say." - Ghandi
nruddock posted Sun, 08 November 2009 at 10:34 AM
Quote - > Quote - I suspect that whoever wrote the comment was misinterpreting this paragraph :- > Quote - 6. You may NOT copyright and distribute rendered still or animated images created to produce trademarks or logotypes for yours or any other Third-party comercial products.
All SANCTUM ART'S products are trademarks or registered trademarks of Sanctum Art, INC.
Other than that, the SA license is pretty much the same (but wordier) as the store license here and elsewhere (it has similarities in form to the license for Poser's included content).
I dunno.. thats pretty clear: you cannot use renders of their content for ANY commercial use, period. No wiggle room.. just NO.
That clause clearly says not to do Trademarks and Logos because the likenesses are already Trademarked.
The previous clause which says :- > Quote - 5. You may copyright and distribute rendered still or animated images derived from the Restricted Content without restriction or royalty to SANCTUM ART provided you do not violate other clauses of this agreement.
is also quite clear.
wolf359 posted Sun, 08 November 2009 at 10:36 AM
Quote -
All those words seem to create the wiggle room rather than remove it. You are free to "copyright and distribute rendered ... images" if you're not producing "trademarks or logotypes for ... commercial products."
Thank you
Well to be honest I dont care why he is hated
I think its only fair to warn people who come here
and ask about a poser merchants products
not to be disuaded by his "Enemies" who Spread false
information about their usage limitations.
I clearly remember the outrage over at the DAZ Forums
when Sanctumart released his werewolves
and Made the boasting promo Statement (paraphrasing):
***"These Models are of the highest Quality Dont waste your money on those Comical Attempts to make something like it"
Many Touchy/Feely people in the Daz forums Assumed he was referring to the somewhat Cartoonish (IMHO) "Lycanthrope" werewolf figure By a popular merchant named "lynn" and declared
Jihad against Michael Rak( SA) and go on the attack every time his cursed name is mentioned.
So what he does not Feel obligated to come and play Kissy face in the forums, or seems boastful and Arrogant in his Ad copy.
..Who cares ?? thats no reason to Lie/mislead about his EULA's
BTW George Lucas is Well known for giving Alot of leeway
for us using Starwars Characters in Fan Art and even Fan Films
But I assure you if you put an "R2D2" in your Commercial Logo trademarked brand
the Lucas Film Lawyers Will come after you.
And Sanctumart's Commercial restriction are no Different from That
The great Majority of poser user are not Professional Graphic Designers Doing Commercial Brand Development and would not be Affected by this anyway.
On the "Proving you are a legal buyer" point
perhaps he lacks the usual Diplomacy and Tact many poserverse Dwellers have come to expect from Merchants but again ...Who cares??
I cant receive tech Support from Luxology For MODO 401
without first establishing myself as a Legal buyer and the same goes for Autodesk,Maxon et al.
Cheers
LostinSpaceman posted Sun, 08 November 2009 at 12:18 PM
There's a HUGE difference in calling for tech support for a product you purchased and having said merchant come after your art gallery calling you a thief with no proof and libeling you all over the Poser forums! I too watched it all in disgust. I wouldn't own one of their products if you beat me with it!
pakled posted Sun, 08 November 2009 at 12:20 PM
It's been a loong time since I took Business Law, but 'commercial' implies that money changed hands after the sale, to someone else. If you can't post on the site (or any other), why would you pay good money to get it?
I'll recognize his avatar; someone with a smoking gun and foot...;)
I wish I'd said that.. The Staircase Wit
anahl nathrak uth vas betude doth yel dyenvey..;)
jeffg3 posted Sun, 08 November 2009 at 1:39 PM
Quote - here:
http://poserpros.daz3d.com/forums/viewtopic.php?t=54287
The attitude they (SA) exhibit on that thread is appalling.
And their "arguments" are farcical.
dasquid posted Sun, 08 November 2009 at 2:50 PM
Dude there is a BIG difference between asking for tech support and having a company rep see that you used their product and them emailing you DEMANDING that you show proof of a valid license or they take you to court.
Oh and not sure about anything else but the reason you cant use the "grim armor" is because it is actually the Jin-roh armor (probably with very few changes, haven't compared the two but the helmet looks VERY similar.) So naturally they don't want you using someone else's trademark armor in something commercial like a movie or vid game (as if you could use something that poly heavy in a vid game these days)
Quote - > Quote -
All those words seem to create the wiggle room rather than remove it. You are free to "copyright and distribute rendered ... images" if you're not producing "trademarks or logotypes for ... commercial products."
Thank you
Well to be honest I dont care why he is hated
I think its only fair to warn people who come here
and ask about a poser merchants products
not to be disuaded by his "Enemies" who Spread false
information about their usage limitations.I clearly remember the outrage over at the DAZ Forums
when Sanctumart released his werewolves
and Made the boasting promo Statement (paraphrasing):
***"These Models are of the highest Quality Dont waste your money on those Comical Attempts to make something like it"
Many Touchy/Feely people in the Daz forums Assumed he was referring to the somewhat Cartoonish (IMHO) "Lycanthrope" werewolf figure By a popular merchant named "lynn" and declared
Jihad against Michael Rak( SA) and go on the attack every time his cursed name is mentioned.
So what he does not Feel obligated to come and play Kissy face in the forums, or seems boastful and Arrogant in his Ad copy.
..Who cares ?? thats no reason to Lie/mislead about his EULA'sBTW George Lucas is Well known for giving Alot of leeway
for us using Starwars Characters in Fan Art and even Fan Films
But I assure you if you put an "R2D2" in your Commercial Logo trademarked brand
the Lucas Film Lawyers Will come after you.
And Sanctumart's Commercial restriction are no Different from ThatThe great Majority of poser user are not Professional Graphic Designers Doing Commercial Brand Development and would not be Affected by this anyway.
On the "Proving you are a legal buyer" point
perhaps he lacks the usual Diplomacy and Tact many poserverse Dwellers have come to expect from Merchants but again ...Who cares??
I cant receive tech Support from Luxology For MODO 401
without first establishing myself as a Legal buyer and the same goes for Autodesk,Maxon et al.Cheers
MachineClaw posted Sun, 08 November 2009 at 3:06 PM
one can use Sanctum Arts products for commercial use.
one cannot make logos using the products or images that would be come trademarked by another company because the company would then have rights to the product and it's use, and only Sanctum Arts has that right.
Almost all Poser products have similar restrictions. Daz has the same restrictions, from Daz3D EULA:
"DAZ gives no rights or warranties with regard to the use of any objects, names, trademarks, service marks, or works of authorship depicted in any 3-D Model(s) and the User must satisfy themselves that all necessary rights or consents that may be required for the User's particular use of a 3-D Model are obtained from the applicable third party(ies) owning or having rights in to such objects, names, trade marks, service marks, or works of authorship."
both EULA, Daz3D and Sanctum Arts have the same restrictions just worded a bit differently.
Sanctum Arts produces some of the best Poser models and products. While some may have had problems with the way Sanctum Arts has done things in the past (3 years ago!) the poser community doesn't let a sleeping dog lay they like to beat dead horses (most of whom have never owned or will own one of their products).
I own several Sanctum Art products and have always been treated proffesionally by Mike and SanctumKitty.
TrekkieGrrrl posted Sun, 08 November 2009 at 3:39 PM
Ah what a treat cackle I'd all but forgotten about this one. Thanks for providing me with an hour filled with malicious glee ;)
FREEBIES! | My Gallery | My Store | My FB | Tumblr |
You just can't put the words "Poserites" and "happy" in the same sentence - didn't you know that? LaurieA
Using Poser since 2002. Currently at Version 11.1 - Win 10.
NoelCan posted Sun, 08 November 2009 at 4:05 PM
Just had a look at the site.. Still has e-frontier as the site for Poser.!!
TOS seems similar to most others I have seen..
MikeJ posted Sun, 08 November 2009 at 4:09 PM
Quote -
More speculation most defeninitely doesn't help.
Are you kidding?
Speculation is one of the greatest sources of entertainment around here. It's practically tradition. It definitely helps on an otherwise boring day.
Why would anyone want to discourage that?
:laugh:
LostinSpaceman posted Sun, 08 November 2009 at 4:18 PM
Quote - While some may have had problems with the way Sanctum Arts has done things in the past (3 years ago!) the poser community doesn't let a sleeping dog lay they like to beat dead horses (most of whom have never owned or will own one of their products).
One doesn't have to own a companies product in order to judge a companies professionalism based on their public behavior. I wouldn't own stock in Exxon either after the way they treated the mess they made in Alaska.
SoulTaker posted Sun, 08 November 2009 at 4:36 PM
**MachineClaw said
"**Sanctum Arts produces some of the best Poser models and products. While some may have had problems with the way Sanctum Arts has done things in the past (3 years ago!) the poser community doesn't let a sleeping dog lay they like to beat dead horses (most of whom have never owned or will own one of their products)."
sounds about right for this place
nruddock posted Sun, 08 November 2009 at 5:58 PM
Another thing to consider is that the gallery comment that set this thread off is almost certainly against the TOS.
wolf359 posted Sun, 08 November 2009 at 6:04 PM
Quote - **MachineClaw said
"**Sanctum Arts produces some of the best Poser models and products. While some may have had problems with the way Sanctum Arts has done things in the past (3 years ago!) the poser community doesn't let a sleeping dog lay they like to beat dead horses (most of whom have never owned or will own one of their products)."sounds about right for this place
Quoted for Agreement.
Cheers
wolf359 posted Sun, 08 November 2009 at 6:41 PM
UTTER NONSENSE!!
SA "Grim" ripped of "kill Zone"
"kill Zone" ripped off "Deep eyes"
"Deep eyes" Ripped off " Jin Roh"
" Jin Roh" Ripped off "Darth Vader"
Whom of course Himself Ripped off........
wolf359 posted Sun, 08 November 2009 at 6:43 PM
jartz posted Sun, 08 November 2009 at 8:53 PM
After reading this PoserPros memory lane, I just got tickled pink with one posters interpretation of the situation -- a real classic.
In all fairness, it's not a laughing matter, but oh well...
JB
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Asus N50-600 - Intel Core i5-8400 CPU @ 2.80GHz · Windows 10 Home/11 upgrade 64-bit · 16GB DDR4 RAM · 1TB SSD and 1TB HDD; Graphics: NVIDIA Geforce GTX 1060 - 6GB GDDR5 VRAM; Software: Poser Pro 11x
lmckenzie posted Sun, 08 November 2009 at 9:59 PM
How odd, I was just looking at one of their products but I've never bought into the idea that genius exculpates arrogance or aggressive litigiousness. Good Iron and Blood defense though Wolf.
"Democracy is a pathetic belief in the collective wisdom of individual ignorance." - H. L. Mencken
dasquid posted Sun, 08 November 2009 at 10:33 PM
Eh I have been wrong before and this wont be the last time so fuck it. besides just because he can make a good model does NOT excuse assholish behavior to customers/potential customers. No matter how he thinks he is "protecting his IP. Some people will buy everything they ever use and some will never buy anything because they have a skewed view on copyright and the internet. but sending nastygrams to everyone who uses his stuff just because the name that they posted a render under doesn't match the name that they bought it under is pretty fucking stupid.
Oh and yeah the incident may be three years old but it is still relevant because i seriously doubt he has stopped this behavior.
Only thing with your comparison of Darth Vader and the samurai is the fact that they look nothing alike. also notice no glowing eyes so Vader shouldn't even be in your little mashup.
Edit: to add language filter. ( I did say fuck after all)
MachineClaw posted Sun, 08 November 2009 at 11:24 PM
Quote - Oh and yeah the incident may be three years old but it is still relevant because i seriously doubt he has stopped this behavior.
There hasn't been another post like that one at that site in three years. I'd say that proves you pretty wrong and that how SanctumArt deals with this community has changed.
The Poser community loves a pitchfork feista no matter how much time has passed.
SamTherapy posted Mon, 09 November 2009 at 12:44 AM
Never had any problems with the people at SA meself. Bought a lot of their stuff, too. My one and only gripe is the P4/PP material settings take forever to change over to something that works properly in P6, since there are thousands of material zones.
I'm not taking any sides here, merely telling you of my experience.
Coppula eam se non posit acceptera jocularum.
LostinSpaceman posted Mon, 09 November 2009 at 1:21 AM
Quote - > Quote - Oh and yeah the incident may be three years old but it is still relevant because i seriously doubt he has stopped this behavior.
There hasn't been another post like that one at that site in three years. I'd say that proves you pretty wrong and that how SanctumArt deals with this community has changed.
The Poser community loves a pitchfork feista no matter how much time has passed.
What you call a "pitchfork fiesta" I call "A Word to the Wise" or "Buyer Beware". Customers have a right to know the public practices of the companies with whom they do business with. When someone comes along asking about their rights to the useage of a SA Product, they have every right to be made aware of the possible pitfalls using said products could lead them into. The fact that there's such a "Glowing" example of public record to point them to is just icing on the cake.
Paloth posted Mon, 09 November 2009 at 1:40 AM
Clearly the restriction is limited to the creation of logos. At one point it might have been dangerous to post non-profit renders under nicks not in the S.A. database, and this has engendered a lasting ill-will as well as dyslexia when it comes to reading licenses.
At least people aren't lying and calling the S.A. figures low quality like some do with Apollo out of a malice for its creator.
Download my free stuff here: http://www.renderosity.com/homepage.php?page=2&userid=323368
estherau posted Mon, 09 November 2009 at 2:15 AM
I can use my daz and renderosity people for making a logo can't I? I mean you place them in a little scene and morph them and pose them, then render - coudln't that be a logo?
I do remember when DAZ had a morph called anne marrie godard that they placed restrictions on. She couldn't be in any porn pics for a start.
I have a feeling she didn't sell too well.
Love esther
I aim to update it about once a month. Oh, and it's free!
Diogenes posted Mon, 09 November 2009 at 2:55 AM
Hmmm..... Didn't even know of SA till now. But from looking at their stuff, looks excellent! I dont know what they may have done in the past, but I see some very nice products I would like to own. And I like the idea they make things for Poser, which likely means it will work in Poser.
Does their stuff work well? I bit more spendy than alot of other content, but if they work as well as they look, well worth the money.
As far as what SA or Anton may have done in the past, neither have harmed me personally in any way, so I reserve judgement. I think people/companies get demonized for some small mistake which gets blown out of proportion by the masses. Human nature seems to dictate that we must have someone/thing to hate and villify. I am by no means an exception. But if its all the same I think I will reserve judgement.
Someone mentioned Anton/Apollo. May be off topic, but it's a good example of what happens in comunities like this. I was not here for whatever fiasco transpired, for so many people to hate the guy. But I do know that however arrogant or other people may have found Anton to be, he also had many admirable qualities. He was also talented, straight forward and honest. We all have our faults, and make mistakes that we may wish we could change. I like to think we all have our better qualities as well.
I am sure this likely holds true for SA as well. Whatever mistakes they have made, it's not likely they are all bad. Personally I like to hate Daz for their marketing, but at the same time they put out products I like and they are organized and stable. So I dislike some things and like others. Sounds about like everyone else I have ever met in this world.
Gotta go back to work on my own faults. :biggrin:
nruddock posted Mon, 09 November 2009 at 4:06 AM
Quote - I can use my daz and renderosity people for making a logo can't I? I mean you place them in a little scene and morph them and pose them, then render - coudln't that be a logo?
The license doesn't mention any restriction, but the whole point of a logo is to be as unique as possible (as they're essentially de facto trademarks, registered or not) so you probably wouldn't want to for anything but the most trivial situations.
wolf359 posted Mon, 09 November 2009 at 5:03 AM
Quote - How odd, I was just looking at one of their products but I've never bought into the idea that genius exculpates arrogance or aggressive litigiousness. Good Iron and Blood defense though Wolf.
Odd I Dont Consider the Man a "Genius" he seems very meticulous, most times,(Look at the interior of the "pitbull" vehicle!!)
Frankly he has had some major Quality Control issues with some of his releases.
the "Grim" Armor had a knife sheath geometry file that was missing its .obj extension causing a Loading error for me.
I believe his "Scythe" creature and his Hummer H2 SUV had similar problems back in his DAZ PA days.
and I had to conduct a system wide removal of his useless poser4 Era"reflection maps" which Convert to horrible environment maps in Maxon Cinema4D where I render with Vray
yet amazingly one rarely hears these legitimate BUYER criticisms but instead a predictable child like "Me too" Chorus what a horrible meanie he is, most of which Violate the TOS prohibiting personal Attacks, and largely from people who dont even do Sci-fi renders or own a single product of his.
.
Arrogance: thats his problem .
Litigiousnes: LOL!! probably the most empty of threats are the : "me is gonna sue youse" , variety posted in web forums.
May we please hear from at least one poor soul who has actually
been hauled into a court of Law by this dangerous Aggressor.??
Cheers
estherau posted Mon, 09 November 2009 at 5:12 AM
nruddock - but the reason i use poser and bought content is to make art for various purposes - book covers, a commercial comic, and maybe a logo one day. i'm not that great at drawing so that's why i want poser
obviously some wolfish critter in a particular pose rendered in a particular way would have about as much uniqueness for a logo as any rendered art would have as unique "art" - surely? why should a logo be different to a book cover - if i render it - it is my art isn't it??
love esther
I aim to update it about once a month. Oh, and it's free!
wolf359 posted Mon, 09 November 2009 at 5:39 AM
Hi you should read up on Trade Mark&Copyright
here is a very simple example of what is allowed and what is NOT.
............this is Allowed
wolf359 posted Mon, 09 November 2009 at 5:40 AM
Cheers
nruddock posted Mon, 09 November 2009 at 5:42 AM
Attached Link: http://images.google.com/images?q=logo
[Logos](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Logo) don't use rendered artwork (see [Graphic Design](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graphic_design)), rarely include figures, and are pretty much always used as [Trademarks](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trademark).See also -> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trademark_dilution
estherau posted Mon, 09 November 2009 at 5:46 AM
I still think this goes to the very heart of why poser users use poser.
you make a picture and unless you have a freebie with rendering restrictions, your render is yours and you should be able to do what you like with it. If a merchant wants to put restrictions, sure he can (but if people realize this it will probably reduce his sales), but when you buy stuff from daz and renderosity you expect to be able to use your render for anything. well I always thought so. Is this not true then?
love esther
I aim to update it about once a month. Oh, and it's free!
nruddock posted Mon, 09 November 2009 at 6:24 AM
Quote - ... but when you buy stuff from daz and renderosity you expect to be able to use your render for anything. well I always thought so. Is this not true then?
There's a difference between between "forbidden by the license" and "not suitable".
lisarichie posted Mon, 09 November 2009 at 6:36 AM
Quote - Edit: to add language filter. ( I did say fuck after all)
Isn't that Brit slang for "Hello, weather's great, how are you, the kids are doing well in school, how's the Mum, want to get together for dinner this weekend"?:biggrin:
estherau posted Mon, 09 November 2009 at 6:41 AM
quote
There's a difference between between "forbidden by the license" and "not suitable".
You mean like if I wanted to make V3 do naughty things with M4?
I aim to update it about once a month. Oh, and it's free!
jerr3d posted Mon, 09 November 2009 at 8:08 AM
interesting discussion. On a side note, some of you may "own" a Sanctum Arts' model and not even know it. Iirc Poser 6 included the "Robot Cat" as a "stock model".
dasquid posted Mon, 09 November 2009 at 8:12 AM
Quote - interesting discussion. On a side note, some of you may "own" a Sanctum Arts model and not even know it. Iirc Poser 6 included the "Robot Cat" as a "stock model".
That's different besides SA has no say on how things can be used that are included in poser.
estherau posted Mon, 09 November 2009 at 8:12 AM
I want to be able to use my renders for anything. I actually don't really want to put V3 and M4 together like that, but I wan the freedom to do any sort of render for any purpose.
Otherwise we are saying "you can draw a logo yourself and use it for a logo, but don't render one from premade meshes, as this isn't really your art at all you know."
Love esther
I aim to update it about once a month. Oh, and it's free!
MikeJ posted Mon, 09 November 2009 at 11:29 AM
Quote -
Otherwise we are saying "you can draw a logo yourself and use it for a logo, but don't render one from premade meshes, as this isn't really your art at all you know."
So what's wrong with that? It isn't "your art at all", you know. That's the bottom line, isn't it? Why should one expect to be able to use someone else's creation as a straight-up logo design?
Quote -
I want to be able to use my renders for anything. I actually don't really want to put V3 and M4 together like that, but I wan the freedom to do any sort of render for any purpose.
Well I want to win the lottery, become World Dictator and have a harem, but that's not likely to happen, and just wanting something doesn't make it so...
And if anyone wants to do logos or anything else in that sort of copyright zone, probably they should learn how to make all their own original content, or just do something else.
I guess the bottom line is you just have to read the EULA and choose to either go along with it or don't buy the product in question. Caveat emptor and all that.
MachineClaw posted Mon, 09 November 2009 at 11:31 AM
Quote - I want to be able to use my renders for anything. I actually don't really want to put V3 and M4 together like that, but I wan the freedom to do any sort of render for any purpose.
Otherwise we are saying "you can draw a logo yourself and use it for a logo, but don't render one from premade meshes, as this isn't really your art at all you know."
Love esther
esther "I wan the freedom to do any sort of render for any purpose."
well - you can't. It depends. When doing commercial work it depends on the EULA of the product and what the client needs and demands. If the client wants you to give them all working files, photoshop, lightwave, meshes, textures etc. when done with the project then your out of luck cause almost all poser products EULA is no redistribution of the mesh.
Now a client can buy the same products you are using, I've done this in the past for clients, I made a list of all products and the client bought them and I gave them all my working files but did not redistribute anything as the client had the poser products used.
book covers or CD covers usually are just renders and you can do commercial renders and distribute the images but again it depends on the clients specs when doing the job.
I did a CD cover for a band and in my contract I put that they were only allowed to use the images I provided for CD productions. When the band went to make t-shirts and put the images of the CD cover as their logo then we had big problems. Both with my contract useage and with poser EULA agreements for the products that I used. Band ended up going in another direction due to the hassle of rights and I didn't get any more work from them.
When you do commercial works of art there are all kinds of sticky situations you end up in. Do you own the rights to the image or does the client of the book cover? Can you make posters after the client has paid for the cover etc. All that comes under your contract with the clients.
the majority of poser users do not do commercial works and those that do read all the fine print of EULA and agreements of products to make sure they are covered when using poser products.
for commercial renders being sold or doing work for a client almost all poser products allow some form of this as long as you don't sell exclusive rights as you aren't the copyright holder.
that's why the Sanctum Art's EULA topic as well as the ApolloMax EULA come up from time to time. But most don't read the Daz3D EULA and it covers similar topics in that agreement for every Daz3D product sold.
this is why I don't do much commercial work anymore, I hate clients and their demands!!! it always sounds great to make $800 on a job until all my time gets exhausted making sure all the legal stuff is done properly and in the end with time of producing the job I end up at the end of the day with $50 in my pocket for 2 weeks of work. Rarely worth it to me.
Mugsey posted Mon, 09 November 2009 at 12:51 PM
This ENTIRE THREAD can be summed up with one simple statement.....
Qoute "DON'T DOWNLOAD OR BUY ANYTHING FROM PRICKS (as in "Oh-I pricked my finger!" Lol. :lol: )!" Unqoute.
Notice that it was a generalized warning - and I never mentioned any names (wink wink).
If your renders aren't yours - why do them?
#1, READ LICENSES! If your unsure about what the license is saying - then delete and swear off the product, ask for a refund if they offer them, or email the product author and ask questions.
#2, Word of mouth advertising (or word of "text" advertising) is everything. Draw your own conclusions.
#3, Not only steer clear of the tyrannically capitolist licenses that tell you that you can't use a product commercially even if you bought it, but also the COPY LEFT junk to!
If you create something with a copyleft product, then your work is instantly a "no rights work".
You can never sell or profit from anything that you make with a copyleft license because the derivatives clause is universal! Also watch out for the "GNU / GPL" crapola - I HATE that ughly OX head! Lol :lol:. Examine CC (Creative Commons) and GNU licenses CAREFULLY!
#4, LOOK UP COPYRIGHT LAW! A lot of people either claim copyright to things that under the law they have no right to period (non - derivative raw public domain works / images of government officials, etc., Or they ILLEGALLY deny users "fair use" exceptions (which denieing someone fair use exceptions to use of your product is actually a FEDERAL CRIME under U.S. statutes - TITLES 13 to 17, UNITED STATES COPYRIGHT LAW - COPYRIGHT FRAUD!!!.)).
Companies have gotten into a lot of trouble, and have had to pay federal fines over copyright fraud.
OH - and by the way, if you proclaim a work that you've created as PUBLIC DOMAIN - but still attatch a NON-COMMERCIAL USE clause to it -
THEN YOU ARE COMMITTING COPYRIGHT FRAUD!!!!
Because once you proclaim a work as "PUBLIC DOMAIN", you have in essence abandoned any and all rights that you have to that work PERIOD - and you have declared it as PUBLIC PROPERTY! ...YOU CAN'T HAVE YOUR CAKE AND EAT IT TO!!!
Under U.S. LAW, Just as a work is automatically copyrighted to it's creator once it's created, it's also automatically and irrevocably public domain once the creator declares it so, and any "non-commercial use" clause that you might stick on the end of that declaration doesn't mean diddly sqaut and will not hold up in court unless your Microsoft, Sony, Time Warner, Disneyco, or somebody else who can grease a politicians palm or dish out shady payola or scary poverty threats. Lol.
FrankT posted Mon, 09 November 2009 at 1:48 PM
My only gripe with the VAP armour is the damn reflection maps - takes forever to get rid of 'em (an the specular settings) in Vue.
Other than that I've never had any problems with SA
Mugsey posted Mon, 09 November 2009 at 1:50 PM
SOME POPULAR LICENSES THAT YOU SHOULD READ CAREFULLY AND BE VERY WARY OF:
#1, M.I.T.
#2, GNU / GPL
#3, CREATIVE COMMONS COPY LEFT, SHARE ALIKE, AND SHARE ALIKE / ATTRIBUTION.
#4, THE "SOME RIGHTS RESERVED" LICENSES (They often have some funky fine print snags that'll get you!)
#5, OSL / OPEN SOURCE: Contrary to popular belief - these are NOT public domain grants.
Often OSL licenses will contain VERY sticky clauses that could end up costing you dearly. Don't avoid them - BUT READ THEM CAREFULLY!
#6, "Academic / Educational Use Only:
Occasionally you will find products or "freeware" that is labelled "PUBLIC DOMAIN" - but erroniously also carry a "FOR EDUCATIONAL - NON-COMMERCIAL USE ONLY" clause - which is of course copyright fraud, and thus illegal. HOWEVER - if you choose to use them (even though they have been PUBLICLY PROCLAIMED / DECLARED AS PUBLIC DOMAIN), then be prepared to possibly defend your position legally (You would of course more than likely win your argument - but it's a hassle best avoided anyway!).
ALSO - if you email a product author / creator about the use of his or her product - and they give you permission to use the product commercially - then SAVE YOUR EMAIL CORRESPONDENCES BOTH DIGITALLY, AND ON PAPER PRINT OUTS!!! - Burn the email resonses onto a disk because they are THE SAME AS A LICENSE AND LEGALLY BINDING!!!
An author - if they are unscrupulous - which is not at all rare - may give you permission in private emails, but then attempt to sue your butt off when you follow through and start marketing your derivative work. And also - don't be afraid to clarify the royalty free staus of the product also.
bantha posted Mon, 09 November 2009 at 3:35 PM
I don't see this thread going in any productive direction any more.
Locking this, before it becomes even worse.
A ship in port is safe;
but that is not what ships are built for.
Sail out to sea and do new things.
-"Amazing
Grace" Hopper
Avatar image of me done by Chidori.