Discuss Scratch
- Discussion Forums
- » Suggestions
- » A Rule For No-Recolors And Art Theft
- mopar
-
14 posts
A Rule For No-Recolors And Art Theft
Only report art theft if the person did NOT give credit. If the person does give credit, don't report.What these guys said. If you see an art theft, report it, and the ST will take care of it (make sure you include the link to the original). Anyway, since this has been solved, should we close this?Yeah, everything on Scratch is CC protected, and you won't get in legal trouble even in places like dA.Lol, are you talking about in real life? Art theives can get arrested in real life, but on Scratch (or any other art website) they can't get arrested.This is a pretty good example. I've been recolored TWICE, But I'm fine when the person asks first. If not, and DOESN'T GIVE CREDIT, Report 'em. Other then that, just ignore the recolors.
And what about Art Thieves? They are better off getting arrested by the FBI. (Or some sort of Police) (Necropost.)
- dude341
-
1000+ posts
A Rule For No-Recolors And Art Theft
Sticky. No support
3. Disabling “See inside” (formerly locking downloads)
Several people want to be able to lock their projects so that they are read-only, and other people can't see the code to copy their scripts, sounds, or artwork. However, the motto of Scratch is "Imagine - Program - Share". By putting a project on the site, you give anyone who sees it the right to see your code, all data in it, and potentially copy it. Part of the whole goal of Scratch is remixing. If you do not wish to allow this, then you are welcome to publish the project on your own site (once the downloadable Scratch 2.0 comes out).
- Discussion Forums
- » Suggestions
-
» A Rule For No-Recolors And Art Theft