Yes I can explain.
I have downloadable products, stock photos, that come with usage licenses. The terms & conditions include (currently) two types of usage license and one or other of the two licence types are selectable as attributes.
The licences govern what a customer can and cannot do with an image. Customers can have different licenses for different photos within one order. The customer will have checked the box "I have read and understood and signed in blood... etc..." at step 2 of the checkout process. I don't care whether or not they have really read the T&C only that they acknowledge that they have.
The issues are:
- Though not desirable, the scope of licenses can change and it is useful to have a copy of the T&C's extant at the time of purchase
- Company staff may change and it is useful for the photo to be linked to its license so that others can use it appropriately
I have tried:
- zipping the T&C with each downloadable image. This leads to massive bloat, excessive bandwidth and results in multiple instances of the T&C document being downloaded when there are multiple products
- I have tried adding an appropriate license document as a download to each of the two license attributes. Again multiple images may have the same licence document which will appear as many times as there are downloadable products. This option at least gives the customer the option to download the T&C whereas the first option does not. See attached image as to how that would appear against product 005-036.
I have two choices:
- be content that the user has checked the "I have read the..." box and leave it at that
- find a way of adding a copy of the T&C with the order so that it is there for future reference
Option 1 has the benefit of not placing additional obstacles in the way of the customer's buying experience. I cannot think of an elegant solution to option 2 but I thought I'd ask just in case.
Thanks,
Ric


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