Photobucket's Attempted TOS Amendment Mostly Fails–Pierce v. Photobucket(blog.ericgoldman.org)
blog.ericgoldman.org
Photobucket's Attempted TOS Amendment Mostly Fails–Pierce v. Photobucket
https://blog.ericgoldman.org/archives/2026/03/photobuckets-attempted-tos-amended-mostly-fails-pierce-v-photobucket.htm
This raises a broader question that affects any cloud storage service: what level of notification actually constitutes informed consent when you're retroactively changing the commercial use of data that users uploaded under a completely different understanding?
The DMCA 1202(b) angle is also underexplored in the coverage — Photobucket allegedly removed copyright management information from photos before licensing them. That's a separate and quite serious exposure that goes beyond the biometric claims.
The deeper issue for users is the fundamental mismatch between "free storage" business models and long-term data custody. When you upload to a third-party server, you're implicitly trusting their future business decisions — decisions made under pressures that didn't exist when you signed up.