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  2. 15 Best Websites for Selling Your Photos Online - AOL

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

    Here are 15 photography businesses, stock photography websites and other great options where you can start selling your physical prints or digital images: Shutterstock. Getty Images. SmugMug ...

  3. How to Sell Photos Online: 15 Websites + Pro Tips - AOL

    www.aol.com/sell-photos-online-15-websites...

    1. 500px Prime. More than 1 million customers purchase stock images with 500px, according to the site. Free users receive up to 60% and paid users receive up to 100% net for every license sold ...

  4. Microstock photography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microstock_photography

    The pioneer of microstock photography was Bruce Livingstone, who created iStockphoto, originally a free stock photo site that quickly became an industry phenomenon. [citation needed] Livingstone sold iStockphoto to Getty Images in February 2006 for US$ 50 million. Many other sites sprang up in the years after iStockphoto's inception.

  5. Dreamstime - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dreamstime

    Prices of the licenses images vary from $0.20 to thousands of dollars, of which the contributor receives a percentage. [9] Besides stock photography and illustrations the company also allows curation of stock footage. [9] [17] In 2011, DreamsTime reported a record year with more than 4.2 million customers. [18]

  6. Depositphotos - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Depositphotos

    Depositphotos is a company operating a royalty-free content website with headquarters in New York, USA.It was founded by Dmitry Sergeev in November 2009 in Kyiv, Ukraine. [1] [2] The Depositphotos library has over 200 million files, [3] including royalty-free stock photos, vector images, video clips, [4] and editorial files. [5]

  7. 123RF - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/123RF

    In 2005, Inmagine set up 123RF, which offers royalty-free stock images, videos, and audio clips. Unlike the previous business model, 123RF allows photographers around the world to sell their work on the platform under a crowdsourcing model. [2] In 2011, Inmagine established a global presence with 44 regional offices worldwide. [3]