Episode: 3370 Title: HPR3370: More Free Images? Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3370/hpr3370.mp3 Transcribed: 2025-10-24 22:09:15 --- This is Haka Public Radio episode 3,374, Friday the 2nd of July 2021. Today's show is entitled, more free images. And is part of the series, Gimp, It is hosted by AYUKA And is about 14 minutes long And Karima Clean Flag. The summer is, We look at some more free photos I'd like to see if they are really free. This episode of HPR is brought to you by An Honesthost.com Get 15% discount On all shared hosting With the offer code HPR15 That's HPR15 Better web hosting That's Honest and Fair At An Honesthost.com Hello, this is AYUKA. Welcome to Hacker Public Radio and another exciting episode in our ongoing series about Gimp and Image Processing. And what I'm going to do is take a look at some more possible sources of images. And the reason is that my wife sent me something. Now she's a marketing consultant who has a background in graphic design. This means she's doing for a living many of the things I have been doing as a hobby in these Gimp tutorials. In the days of the plague we were doing long walks every day as a form of exercise. And I would often talk about my tutorials and what I was trying to accomplish. On one of these walks I was explaining that I was trying to use many different free image sites as we've discussed. And the next day she sent me a link to some more. Now it came from a marketing site called 20 over 10 link in the show notes and offered their 15 favorite sites. Links to all of those are in the show notes as well. Now these are mostly high-quality stock photo sites which is of course what my wife uses in her own work. The advantage of sites like these is that you might get better quality images than you find on a public domain site. So I thought I should investigate and here's what I found. Most of these sites are reasonably free though I wish they were to often creating their own licenses. Fairly typical of these is a site called unsplash.com which builds itself as the internet source of freely usable images. But what does that mean exactly? To find out I check the license and I give them full marks for the fact that that was easy for me to do. Now the unsplash license says unsplash photos are made to be used freely. Our license reflects that. All photos can be downloaded and used for free. Commercial and non-commercial purposes. No permission needed parentheses though attribution is appreciated. What is not permitted? Photos cannot be sold without significant modification. Compiling photos from unsplash to replicate a similar or competing service. Even though attribution isn't required unsplash photographers appreciate it as it provides exposure to their work and encourages them to continue sharing. It goes on to say what they call long form. It's not that long. Unsplash grants you an irrevocable non-exclusive worldwide copyright license to download, copy, modify, distribute, perform, and use photos from unsplash for free. Including for commercial purposes. Without permission from or attributing the photographer or unsplash, this license does not include the right to compile photos from unsplash to replicate a similar or competing service. Now to be fair this is not a bad license. I think for most people's uses this would be a good site and the images are definitely good ones. Similar sites include pixabay, pexels, kaboom picks, and shudderoo. In fact the license terms I could find on all of these sites look like they came from a single template. So basically what I think they're saying with all of these is yeah use these images but don't try and get into competition with us. Okay, it's not too bad. I could live with that. But do I have to? Well let's let's see. We still have more sites to go. So next I came to negative space. Now I was very happy to see on the front page that all images are licensed CC0 which I like a great deal. Just to double check I went to an image and click through to the download page and saw download the free high resolution image lighthouse sky with the CC0 license and use it however and wherever you like. Okay that sounds good. I love that it has the CC0 license claim right on the homepage of the site and that it repeats it on the download page of each image. I take licensing very seriously and while I tend to think that copyright is way over done particularly in the hands of the big media companies I am friends with an author Michael W. Lucas who has reasonably pointed out that he relies on copyright to make it living. So it can be complicated. My wife uses stock photo sites a lot but she has customers so the cost can be billed to a client or taken as a tax deduction. I don't have any clients or any revenue. In fact I spend money to host these tutorials on a website I pay for. In any case I like it when I can see easily what the license terms are for a site and when I got to fancy crave I did not get that. The site looked like something to check out since it's aimed at freelancers and the 20 over 10 article had disbwered for it. Fancy craves easy to navigate website releases two new images from professional photographers every day. The photos have much more of a fun eclectic vibe perfect for blog posts or social media but under what terms? I saw that the word free was fairly prominent and the encouragements to start downloading and fill up your hard drive but I'm not new to the internet and I don't take the word free at face value. I need details. Now the pictures are grouped as themes so I clicked through to a collection of sunset photos. I saw that each of them said free download but I've seen that exact same language used to say you can download it for free but to use it you need to pay money. I'm sure you've all seen this. There was a collection that said public domain in the tile in the title. It was one for palm trees but I never found anything it looked like an explicit license anywhere on the site. A further down check is that it seemed to auto play video commercials all the time I was on the site. Well next is Burst. Burst is a site that is a subsidiary of Shopify and it looks like it is a kind of photo sharing site. So part of the emphasis is for people to become contributors and upload their own photos. If you scroll down to the bottom of the homepage there is an FAQ section with a clearly marked link to the license page. So a thumbs up there. I clicked through and found a very long page written by a lawyer that covered the terms of service for the site. So much of it involves really what you agree to if you create an account if you upload photos and of course the usual denial of liability if anything goes wrong. But section 4 of this long legalese has the license information and from this it looks like there are two kinds of license involved. One of them is CC0. The other looks a lot like the unsplash license above. You would need to check each photo. But at least when you click through to the download page for an image there is a section on the left sidebar for license. So it is clearly marked. I tried the first five images on the top free downloads and got this license Burst some rights reserved. Then I tried another image from the collections drop down. I got one that is CC0 licensed. Now I could not find any way to restrict the search to CC0 which would have made this site a lot better for me but you can at least get the information. Now the next one, pick jumbo. This puts the word free in large type on the home page but it very quickly pivots to selling memberships. There is an FAQ page but it appears to be for the premium membership only. As far as I can tell there are no truly free images here. It looks like you purchase a membership and then you can download images all you like. But while the FAQ page has some usage information it's in the question and answer format not a real license. So while they're entitled to their own business model I don't think I'll be doing anything here. Now free range is another site using the word free very prominently and in this case there is a clear link on the home page to the license information. They use something called equal license which aims to balance the rights of users and creators. Now the summary of it is you can use images for nearly any purpose commercial or non-commercial without attribution. You cannot sell redistribute or replace the images and you cannot sell products which derive their primary value from the image. Now then there's a link to a more detailed explanation which is not bad but has areas of ambiguity. Now for instance you can use these images freely for printed items like menus, flyers, packaging, mailers and books as long as it's not just a book of photos but you cannot use them to sell items with images printed on them. Now I think I know what they mean by that and I think what they're saying is you can't take their photo and say slap it on a t-shirt and sell it online. But it is a little bit ambiguous. Now they do say they have CC-0 photos available. I could not find a way to just search for CC-0 items and it looks like you have to create an account before you can download anything there. So kind of struck out again. But we've got a few good ones. Libra Shot is a site by one person, Martin Varel, who is the photographer. On the homepage there is a clear link that says license on the top menu bar and clicking through there is clear language that everything is CC-0 licensed. However it is using a version of the license that is older and has been retired. So I'm going to say this is okay with a small asterisk. Then there's a site called Nappy which has an interesting focus. They only have photos of black and brown people. So it's kind of a niche but if that's what you're looking for this would be a good place to go. Under the about menu on the top navigation bar I found the license link and that says everything is CC-0 licensed. So full marks for giving the license information and this would be a go-to site if you needed this particular type of photo. Then there's StockSnap. That's a site that claims to offer beautiful free stock photos and right under that headline is a clear link that says free from copyright restrictions. And you click the link that takes you to the license page where you find that they use CC-0. And in fact they go further than some sites in explaining exactly what CC-0 means. Now wrapping up the list we have SplitShire. And that looks like it has something again similar to that unsplash license which means they're writing their own using common license terms. And finally there was life of picks for which I could find no license information at all. There's nothing obviously findable for the site as a whole and clicking on an image does not give any information either. So this is not anything I can recommend. So at the 15 sites listed most of them had at least some issues with the licensing. I think if you were careful you could use some of the images from these sites but the ones I would recommend based on the licensing are negative space, burst but be careful not all the images are CC-0. Oh you have to be careful there. LibraShot, Nappy and StockSnap. So there's at least a few sites, maybe five sites, that might be worth bookmarking for your future use for images that you can use. Now as always before using an image just be very careful that you check the licensing. You don't want to make a mistake on something like that. And I am always very careful. So I either want to see something on the site itself that says every image here is licensed or I want to see license information for the individual item. And I try and practice what I preach. And if you go to my website you should see at the bottom of every page the Creative Commons license that I license my material under. Now my material I license as a share-like attribution share-like 4.0 license. But it's on every single page. So with that this is Huka for Acro Public Radio. So signing off and as always encouraging you to support free software. Bye-bye. You've been listening to Huka Public Radio at Huka Public Radio. We are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday, Monday through Friday. Today's show, like all our shows, was contributed by an HBR listener like yourself. 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