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DPChallenge Forums >> Photography Discussion >> Alamy - Rights Protected vs. plain Licensed
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03/08/2006 05:48:29 AM · #1
I am trying to grasp the *practical* difference betwee Rights Protected and Non-Exclusive licenses of Alamy. The official explanation can be found here: //www.alamy.com/licensing.asp#traditional

A question to all Alamy contributors here: if you decide to post your image as Licensed, which license type do you usually choose: RP or plain?

If I understand it correctly, majority of buyers will be interested in non-exclusively licensed photographs. Is there a way to serve both camps? In other words, if I list an image as non-exclusively licensed, it seems to me from what I've read that, if somebody wants to buy it as RP, they still can. Do I get it right?

Many thanks in advance for any input.
03/08/2006 05:57:26 AM · #2
Yes. If a buyer wants an exclusive licenced image, then they can ask you through Alamy to provide that. Almost always that situation will be a client wanting an image to become part of some kind of corporate identity, and they won't mind the work in getting the eclusive licence.

e
03/08/2006 06:23:51 AM · #3
I've also had agencies ask me to list my images as licensed if there are issues with releases -

If there are visible faces that I don't have model releases for
If there are very distinct buildings or architecture that I don't have property releases for

Listing the image as a License image gives me the opportunity to first "warn" the intended buyer that there may be issues, and second, restrict the usage of photos once they are purchased so it restricts the liability of the stock agency and me.

The other times I list the image as Licensed is if I'm totally in love with it for some distinct reason - the shot is stylized, a rare or difficult event to shoot, etc. because it will:

make me more money
not show up on a zillion different web sites/magazines and cheapen my beautiful art and my emerging brand name

My hot shot artist friends, whose brand has fully emerged over the last 30 years of shooting, list every photo they sell as a licensed image, and sell buy outs of the all rights at a premium (like $7,000 an image). They tell me they can do this because they have restricted use of their images to a very select group over the years through licensing - I'm not sure I'm buying that or not yet, but that is what they say - and they are sticking to that story.

In reality I've only been doing stock for about a year, and macro payment sites for less than that, so I'm still learning. But that is what I have learned to date - hope it's helpful.
03/08/2006 10:05:29 AM · #4
Your friend is a very wise man!!
03/08/2006 02:58:23 PM · #5
e301: Thanks for confirming.

Digitalknight: what other macro stock sites (besides Alamy) are you contributing to?
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