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Cara has it in their terms of service that they gain the shared copyright of anything posted on their website. Nothing in their terms of service says they can't open a store and sell prints or even sell the data to an AI company.
Cara is literally one of the worse places for artists.
Tos: https://blog.cara.app/terms
The closest thing I can find is the following:
Which doesn't actually grant any copyright; it just explicitly states that the artist remains the copyright holder.
There seems to be a weird hateboner on Instagram for Cara, for unsurprising reasons.
The hateboner is justified. For all it's faults, instagram explicitly says it doesn't own any of the pictures and only has a license to display which the user can revoke at anytime.
Deviant art has this in it's TOS:
It might be due to plain incompetence and not malice but their TOS lets them do a lot more than most platforms.
The terms of service explicitly say that art remains copyright of the artist. Where are you reading that suggests that they've granted themselves extra rights?
I guess you could interpret "are the property of Cara and/or the individual artist" to mean "are the property of either Cara and/or the individual artist at Cara's discretion", but that's such a stretch that I can't see a judge accepting it.
I misspoke in my first comment. It's vague on if copyrights are shared but it does explicitly say it gains ownership.
In any case, this issue has been brought up and they haven't fixed it. Every other platforms makes it very clear who has ownership of what. There's too much room for abuse and its either a grift or incompetence and with all the other problems with the platform, it's not a good look.
Federated platforms are popping up for this kind of thing, better to wait imo.
It also has rapidly-ballooning expenses with basically no income model other than a donation link.
I want a decent new art platform as much as everyone else but I'm not moving my entire portfolio over to a new service that, honestly, looks like it'll be dead in 6-12 months.
It might be worth self-hosting your own website.
This is really the best option. It's incredibly easy these days and let's them incorporate an e-shop later.
Although a lot of these platforms are about getting exposure as well.
What are the terms that say that? I just want to be sure because every few years I see uproar over misinterpretations of some social site's terms of service saying "we have the right to modify and redistribute your work", when all it means is that they can host and make slight modifications to the files you post.
Their TOS isnt very long, a user linked it above.
Here's the abridged part that is of interest: