For starters a lot of the applications I offer on the market are free, the
ones that I do charge for are so low cost, and an attempt to recover the
development costs of the applications.  I certainly haven't made £100's out
of any applications.

I sourced the images I used from the web and in most cases edited the files
to better fit the devices.  What is the difference between me re-displaying
the images sourced from public domain sites to Google displaying the images
in the 'Images' section of its online search?


On Thu, Oct 27, 2011 at 1:16 AM, Christopher Van Kirk <
[email protected]> wrote:

>  I believe that the answer is that they do not do any verification.
>
> What happens is that the original author of the copyrighted content
> complains to them, then as part of the process of determining who is right,
> they suspend your account.
>
> This is all codified in the DMCA, which unfortunately is heavily biased in
> favor of content producers at the expense of users and fair use. It's the
> law, though, in the U.S. at least, so you have to abide by it.
>
>
> On 10/27/2011 7:06 AM, Ricardo Amaral wrote:
>
> This got me thinking about my own app and how Google verifies these things.
> Depending on the material, it can be very easy for them to know if the
> material is copyrighted and if the developer in question have a license to
> use it. In my case, I don't think it's that easy.
>
> I'm developing an app which will uses a couple of icon sets and I'm
> developing a free and paid app. The free app will only be using icons which
> specifically have a license that allow me to do so in a commercial app (the
> same set of icons will be in both versions). In the paid app, I'll be
> removing any icon set for which I don't have a license to use. But how does
> Google now?
>
> I'm thinking about a specific icon set which is free to download and free
> to use under certain circumstances, one of them is not a paid app. But I
> could have bought a license to use it. Will they just ignore a situation
> like this (even if I was in violation of the copyrighted material), they
> really dig into the matter or they just cancel the account? I mean, the only
> way for them to know for sure (I repeat, on this specific situation) is to
> contact me and ask me for some kind of proof that I really have bought a
> license for those icons, or contact the icon author and ask if a guy with my
> developer account name has ever ought a license for them. Do they really do
> that?
>
> Not that I'm trying to find how their process works to circumvent it, I
> just don't want to get my account suspended because they didn't take the
> time to really find out if I was in violation of copyrighted material or
> not. I'm really trying to avoid using stuff that I don't have a license for.
> I believe in giving credit where credit is due and if I want to use
> copyrighted material for which I need to pay first, I will, otherwise I
> won't use it.
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-- 
Regards,
Sy

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