When you create a VSCO profile, you are prompted for a username, description, external link, first and last name, and email address. Only the username and email address are required. The username is seen by others in the app, so if you don`t want your real name and don`t want it to be found, when someone searches for names for you, don`t include it in your profile. According to the complaint filed in california`s Northern District, 17 PicsArt employees created VSCO accounts and used them to rearrange at least 19 presets offered by VSCO, a violation of the vsCO app`s terms, which states that users “agree not to sell, rent, rent, distribute, copy, reproduce, transmit, publicly display, publish, adapt, modify or create derivative works of vsCO Content. While there is no management interaction within the app, you can easily share a photo of VSCO with other networks for that social comment. An additional series of interviews with users who engage in the online community, but have never participated in offline events, can add more inisghts. VSCO (/ˈvɪskoʊ/), formerly known as VSCO Cam, is a mobile photo app for iOS and Android devices. The app was created by Joel Flory and Greg Lutze. [4] [5] [6] The VSCO app allows users to take photos in the app and edit them with predefined filters and editing tools. [7] [8] [9] Hello Jean, Can you take a screenshot of an image in VSCO without the user`s knowledge, or will he be notified with an iPhone? Highlights: Five interviews, a final report with five key findings and suggestions on how to engage users through offline events In summary, we concluded with 5 recommendations that VSCO would apply to its design to engage more users through offline events and improve their user experience with the app. I don`t know, it`s a grey area. Many of us create our own editing filters, even if they look like vsco or not.

VSCO cannot patent the appearance/sound of an image. If PicsArt didn`t steal the VSCO code, I`d say they don`t have a deal. Sigma has already won some time ago a big court decision on self-engineering for its lenses, against Canon/Nikon, etc. Nikon sued Sigma`s operating system, which is VR, and they won this patent action. Canon must have a cross-patent license with Nikon (they have lost similar functions). You can reverse engineer unless the design is patentable. You cannot patent pasting 3rd party lenses on your system or the color of a filter, so VSCO can use the user agreement in this case or if they can prove that the source code has been stolen. Users have mentioned that Instagram is more personal, but less about serious photography…