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  2. Shutterstock - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shutterstock

    Shutterstock, Inc. is an American provider of stock photography, stock footage, stock music, and editing tools; [4] it is headquartered in New York. [5] Founded in 2003 by programmer and photographer Jon Oringer, [6] Shutterstock maintains a library of around 200 million royalty-free stock photos, [7] vector graphics, and illustrations, [8] with around 10 million video clips and music tracks ...

  3. Wikimedia movement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikimedia_movement

    Wikimedia movement. The Wikimedia movement is the global community of contributors to the Wikimedia projects, including Wikipedia. [1][2] This community directly builds and administers these projects [3] with the commitment of achieving this using open standards and software. [4]

  4. Jon Oringer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jon_Oringer

    Jon Oringer. Jon Oringer (born May 2, 1974) is an American programmer, photographer, and billionaire businessman, best known as the founder and CEO of Shutterstock, a stock media company headquartered in New York City. [1] Oringer started his career while a college student in the 1990s, when he created "one of the Web's first pop-up blockers."

  5. 15 Best Websites for Selling Your Photos Online - AOL

    www.aol.com/finance/15-best-websites-selling...

    As a level one contributor, Shutterstock pays a 15% commission for up to 100 licensed photos, illustrations and vectors. At level six, you get paid up to 40% commission over 25,000 licensed photos ...

  6. Wikipedia:Contributing to Wikipedia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Contributing_to...

    WikiProjects are social groups of contributors (anyone may join them), who work together as a team to improve Wikipedia. These groups often focus on a specific topic area (for example, women's history) or a specific kind of task (for example, checking newly created pages).

  7. Help:Getting started - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help:Getting_started

    Training for educators: educators start here! A five-part, 97-page training for professors and other educators who want to run Wikipedia assignments for class, with introductions to core Wikipedia policies, editing basics, and an overview of best practices for designing and implementing Wikipedia assignments.

  8. Wikipedia:FAQ/Contributing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:FAQ/Contributing

    The term "page" encompasses all the material on Wikipedia, including encyclopedia topics, talk pages, documentation, and special pages such as Recent Changes. "Article" is a narrower term referring to a page containing an encyclopedia entry. Thus, all articles are pages, but not all pages are articles. See Wikipedia:What is an article for more.

  9. Wikipedia:How to contribute to Wikipedia guidance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:How_to...

    People are smarter than the words on the page will ever be. This is similar to having a judge to implement and interpret laws. Avoid knee-jerk reactions. Suppose one user does something annoying once. It is then often common practice to add to the boilerplate at the top of the relevant policy page, prohibiting what that user did.