| Huh? This paragraph > By submitting User Content through the Services, you grant Oculus a worldwide, irrevocable, perpetual (i.e. lasting forever), non-exclusive, transferable, royalty-free and fully sublicensable (i.e. we can grant this right to others) right to use, copy, display, store, adapt, publicly perform and distribute such User Content in connection with the Services is pretty much standard in terms of service for virtually any type of online service or, well, anything which involves user-created content. They're not asking for control over your work, they just want to be sure you can't sue them for copyright violation simply by virtue of you using their service and them distributing your content for you. It's legal boilerplate and should not be worrying. Read the ToS of your favourite social media service, it probably has the same paragraph near-verbatim. ---- If you don't believe me, look at the individual provisions, they're quite reasonable: “worldwide” – Oculus want to be sure that they're able to distribute your content in not just your home country, but all regions they're distributing it in. “irrevocable” – Oculus do not want you to be able to revoke their ability to legally distribute your content while they're still doing so. This doesn't mean they won't give you the option to stop doing so. “perpetual” – Likewise, it would be problematic for Oculus if in a year's time they could no longer legally distribute your content. Again, if you wish to stop distributing it, you can ask them to. “non-exclusive” – You're not giving up your rights to let other people distribute the same content. “transferable” – Oculus themselves might be distributing the content, but what if they later merge with another company? In which case, they need to be able to transfer the license. “royalty-free” – Oculus do not want to have to pay you for every single time they make a copy of your content. This doesn't mean they won't pay you if people, say, buy your game. “fully sublicensable” – Oculus, in the course of distributing your content, might use other services (for example, Amazon AWS). In the course of doing so, they need to be able to extend this license to them. “use, copy, display, store, adapt, publicly perform and distribute such User Content in connection with the Services” – Covers every possible use they can think of, because laws may consider each of these to be different. The reason they ask for this license is because otherwise there's only an implicit one, and being outright about it saves them potential legal headaches. Each of these provisions is not necessarily implied in an implicit license grant. It's an unlimited do-anything license because that covers every possible use-case. |