How is it hard to understand that:
1: Every website forum submits the user to a terms of use agreement.
2: phpBB is offered in America with the feature to restrict, or remove, editing included; thereby clearly defining it as a legal software feature to employ on website forums.
3: The edit feature was on indefinite setting previously.
4: Users did use the feature inappropriately counter to
Rule ix of the rules in place since 2004 frequently enough to cause the Moderator and Admin/Owner to discuss the matter at length.
5: The Moderators and Admin/Owner democratically decided to restrict editing to 48 hours so to better implement board adherence to Rule ix of the rules in place since 2004, since reprimand to violator's of Rule ix was aside from the impact which Rule ix addressed.
6: That you don't own any property on the internet that you submit to any website or website forum as ownership of the virtual property of the website.
7: That the decision is ultimately the decision of the Owner of the website or website forum as to how much property right any user retains.
8: That any user at ILP doesn't
have to be given any editing control at all, as is done on several website forums on the internet.
As examples of similar property right scenarios:
Garageband.com (now iLike.com) had/has an agreement whereby if you upload your music to share, they retain controlling rights to dispense that music however they like freely without payment to you.
You retain your right to do the same, but do not retain the right to remove the content from their data library or request them to.
You may remove the content from your profile, but it will not be gone from their data server, or their media circulation access for dispersion.
Hulu.com; pretty much the same thing.
Hubpages.com; pretty much the same thing.
Poetry.com; pretty much the same thing.
And every website forum on the internet...pretty much the same thing, save that in some cases you may or may not have access to remove or edit content depending on the website forum's standards.
Hell, how many people play World of Warcraft and chat on the website forum?
Let's see what the license agreement looks like there?
http://us.blizzard.com/en-us/company/ab ... ofuse.htmlAccount.
NOTWITHSTANDING ANYTHING TO THE CONTRARY HEREIN, YOU ACKNOWLEDGE AND AGREE THAT YOU SHALL HAVE NO OWNERSHIP OR OTHER PROPERTY INTEREST IN THE ACCOUNT, AND YOU FURTHER ACKNOWLEDGE AND AGREE THAT ALL RIGHTS IN AND TO THE ACCOUNT ARE AND SHALL FOREVER BE OWNED BY AND INURE TO THE BENEFIT OF BLIZZARD.
D. User Content.
"User Content" means any communications, images, sounds, and all the material and information that you upload or transmit through a Game client or the Service, or that other users upload or transmit, including without limitation any chat text. You hereby grant Blizzard a perpetual, irrevocable, worldwide, paid-up, non-exclusive, license, including the right to sublicense to third parties, and right to reproduce, fix, adapt, modify, translate, reformat, create derivative works from, manufacture, introduce into circulation, publish, distribute, sell, license, sublicense, transfer, rent, lease, transmit, publicly display, publicly perform, provide access to electronically, broadcast, communicate to the public by telecommunication, enter into computer memory, and use and practice such User Content as well as all modified and derivative works thereof. To the extent permitted by applicable laws, you hereby waive any moral rights you may have in any User Content.
That's right.
Anything you even
speak over voice chat in World of Warcraft is
their property to use any way they wish perpetually.
Your right, in all of the above cases, is to not accept the user license agreement and end use, or to accept the user license agreement and continue use.
Just as a consumer's right is to purchase or not purchase a product.
A consumer's
right does not grant controlling power over the product itself according to
their will.
ILP is a product.
The owner has decided to offer the product for free and foot the bill on his own.
The owner of ILP does not have to offer the product for free.
ILP could charge for this product because ILP is a
product.
Your consumer
right to a product with a usage, and therefore a user license agreement, is to accept or not accept the user agreement of a product.
ILP has full
rights legally to declare full use of property rights for any and all content on ILP and reuse the information.
Example: if ILP made TV commercials, ILP (or any website forum) has the right to display any user's post contents in the advertisement.
ILP has simply chosen to arrange the current form of the user agreement to stipulate that such action would not be conducted without the user's consent of content use.
ILP does
not have to have even this part of the user agreement (most sites don't).
If you do not like that you give away intellectual property rights
of the instance of your writing and that writing's instance of content by writing something on a forum such as ILP or World of Warcraft, then do not agree to the terms of use, and do not post there.
At ILP, and at most places, the declaration of this agreement is at the initial signup of service:
By accessing “ILovePhilosophy.com” (hereinafter “we”, “us”, “our”, “ILovePhilosophy.com”, “http://ilovephilosophy.com”), you agree to be legally bound by the following terms. If you do not agree to be legally bound by all of the following terms then please do not access and/or use “ILovePhilosophy.com”. We may change these at any time and we’ll do our utmost in informing you, though it would be prudent to review this regularly yourself as your continued usage of “ILovePhilosophy.com” after changes mean you agree to be legally bound by these terms as they are updated and/or amended.
Our forums are powered by phpBB (hereinafter “they”, “them”, “their”, “phpBB software”, “www.phpbb.com”, “phpBB Group”, “phpBB Teams”) which is a bulletin board solution released under the “General Public License” (hereinafter “GPL”) and can be downloaded from
http://www.phpbb.com. The phpBB software only facilitates internet based discussions, the phpBB Group are not responsible for what we allow and/or disallow as permissible content and/or conduct. For further information about phpBB, please see:
http://www.phpbb.com/.
You agree not to post any abusive, obscene, vulgar, slanderous, hateful, threatening, sexually-orientated or any other material that may violate any laws be it of your country, the country where “ILovePhilosophy.com” is hosted or International Law. Doing so may lead to you being immediately and permanently banned, with notification of your Internet Service Provider if deemed required by us. The IP address of all posts are recorded to aid in enforcing these conditions.
You agree that “ILovePhilosophy.com” have the right to remove, edit, move or close any topic at any time should we see fit. As a user you agree to any information you have entered to being stored in a database. While this information will not be disclosed to any third party without your consent, neither “ILovePhilosophy.com” nor phpBB shall be held responsible for any hacking attempt that may lead to the data being compromised.
Unfortunately, most people tend to treat user license agreements like this:
