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8 Million Images on Fotolia

Zoltan Arva-Toth | Websites | December 9, 2009 | 1 Comments
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Fotolia has announced that it now offers over eight million images for download. As the first microstock to offer extended licenses, Fotolia provides instant access to a diverse image library of royalty‐free photos, vectors and videos starting at $1. Over 1.4 million professionals look to Fotolia for affordable, high-resolution images, the company claims. Founded in New York City in 2004, Fotolia spans the globe with websites in 10 languages and offices in 12 countries.

Website: Fotolia

Fotolia Press Release

8,000,000 images await you on Fotolia.com

NEW YORK, NY, December 9, 2009 – December 2009 marks another milestone for Fotolia with over 8,000,000 images available for download. As the first microstock to offer extended licenses, Fotolia provides instant access to a diverse image library of royalty‐free photos, vectors and videos starting at just $1.

“Fotolia takes pride in providing the most diverse image database possible,” says Oleg Tscheltzoff, CEO and co‐founder of Fotolia. “We are constantly adding new images to the site in order to give our customers access to the latest images in the stock photography industry.”

On average, Fotolia adds 10,000 new images per day. To view Fotolia’s image library, visit http://www.fotolia.com.

Over 1.4 million people prefer Fotolia, LLC for affordable, royalty‐free images, graphics and HD videos. With the introduction of the Infinite Collection, Fotolia became the first worldwide microstock organization to offer both crowd‐sourced and professional images on one site. Founded in New York City in 2004, Fotolia spans the globe with websites in 10 languages and offices in 12 countries. With over 8,000,000 images to choose from, find it on Fotolia. http://www.fotolia.com



 

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#1 glucosamine chondroitine

I think you're missing one thing.

With the troubles at FT with their new version, a lot of contributers withhold their uploads until things seemed to work again.

Secondly. It seemed that the images of which were uploaded the last days (last week) in V1, had lost their keywords with the transition to V2. So some contributers deleted them and uploaded them again.

I think that these 2 reasons mean that FT gets a lot more uploads these days than they normally get, and this could maybe explain the massive increase in new images the latest days.

7:23 am - Thursday, December 10, 2009

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