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With the exception of the weekly free photo and free vector, all content available at Shutterstock is royalty-free but has an associated cost. Overview of Royalties. Traditionally, a royalty is a fee paid to the author or creator of a work each time a copy of that work is used or sold.
Copyright protects against unauthorized uses, and there are no—or very few—contemporary copyright-free images available anywhere. That means any creative work—such as photos on Instagram, website designs, illustrations, drawings—can all be protected by copyright.
Yes! You can use Shutterstock images on websites without any restrictions on the number of viewers or hits on the website. Under the Standard License, images can also be used in web video without regard to audience size, provided that the production budget is less than $10,000 USD.
When you purchase the usage rights to an image or video in Shutterstock's catalog of royalty-free content, you can legally use it in all the ways outlined in the Terms of Service. In most cases, you don't need to credit the artist or Shutterstock.
Royalty-free images are not the same as copyright-free images. If you want images that are not protected by copyright, you’d have to look for images in the public domain or released under a Creative Commons Zero (CC0) license.
Yes, you can. All images on Shutterstock (except for those marked as “editorial use only”) can be used for commercial purposes. With a standard license, you can use images for marketing and advertising only. With an Extended license, you can also use the images in products for resale.
AN ENHANCED IMAGE LICENSE grants you the right to use Images (which rights are in addition to 1-5 above and exclusive to Enhanced Image Licenses): In any manner permitted under a Standard Image License, without any limitation on the number of reproductions, impressions, or budget;
Yes, photos from Shutterstock are copyrighted. When a photographer takes a photo, they automatically own the copyright to that picture. By uploading their pictures to Shutterstock, photographers grant Shutterstock the right to license these pictures to users under certain terms and conditions.
All of Shutterstock’s images and videos are royalty-free which means you can use them for commercial campaigns, on your blog, and even inside YouTube videos. With other photo and video repositories online, there may be stipulations about how you use images and video.
• You do not have to license your images exclusively through Shutterstock. This means you can also upload your content to other stock agencies or websites for licensing. • Shutterstock will pay you a royalty for each unique download of your content by a customer.