The reason I went with Behance was because of the Photoshop-CC offer compared to using Zenfolio. Zenfolio cost $120 for a subscription that allows you to sell your work, both digital as well as using their print service to send prints. That same $120 spent on PS-CC gives you the PS extended, Lightroom 5.3, 20 gig cloud space and a Behance Pro subscription. So the same $120 I was spending at Zenfolio will not only give me an internet presence but will also give me access all the goodies in the newer versions of PS (Adobe will not add any new functionality to CS-6 version of PS, only PS-CC) as well as LR and cloud services.
The problem Don highlighted doesn't really apply to my situation. I have never sold a digital copy of my work and all the images I have sold , I print them myself. As for the right-click disabled function, we've all heard, ad nauseum, how the right-click disabled is a false sense of security and how there are many ways around that. In fact, the consensus opinion on image security seems to be posting small, low-res copies of your work on the internet. Which is the exact reason Behance states for not disabling the right-click functionality and I tend to agree. Yes, Behance requires a bit more tinkering with but in turn also allows a higher level of personalization by accepting HTML and Wordpress languages. But on the positive side, Behance is very big on promoting your work and your website.
So for my purposes, the $120 a year I was spending on Zenfolio is going a lot further by going with PS-CC.