![]() People just want to create and generally just click through the EULA/TOS/AUS. So I am looking to make sure that is the case when someone asks for what software would be best to design in, I can give complete and full disclosure. I realize now after reading things more closely, that appears to have been inaccurate. Public could download SketchUp Make/Pro Trial at home, create a piece and subsequently have it printed or upload to Thingiverse and still be within compliance to the license agreement. ![]() I like the Warehouse and the Pro features.īut I’m trying to get confirmation for compliance for casual and first time users of the SketchUp software that might want to use 3D Hubs, Shapeways, or local services to print off their own personal creations outside of the Warehouse.īefore looking into this, I thought John Q. ![]() And it’s quite likely that Trimble will increase their Warehouse staff to handle That’s excellent, thank you for that. Passionate people will rat out those who try to skirt around and violate the TOS. People tend to recognize - not appreciate - plagiarism, especially when it happens to them. There’s a passionate community over at the 3D Warehouse. And it’s a no-no to download a model, make a few minor changes and upload it as your own (especially if the modified model ends up being used commercially.) What’s of interest to many people is the General Model License which spells out how to use models we can freely download from the Warehouse - and gives some examples - like it’s okay to add 3rd-party models to your own model if most of the work in your own file is your own, original work. People with commercial accounts would have a SU Pro. The Warehouse TOS seem to be a work in progress, laying the groundwork to be able to sell models through the Warehouse at some date in the future. An article introducing the printable service offered through the Warehouse last year.
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