Hm, I just tried it and downloaded an image I found in that way. But then upon closer look the license requires attribution and disallows derivative works.<p>So the search function of flickr is still not good enough, should be more finegrained with respect to the license options.<p>And why does flickr not have an "add to favorites" button? Puzzles me every time I visit the site. It just goes to show that usability is apparently overrated as a factor for success...
Another good one is sxc.hu.<p><a href="http://www.sxc.hu/advanced_search" rel="nofollow">http://www.sxc.hu/advanced_search</a><p>Just select "no" under the restricted ok button. You'll need to sign in- just use a bugmenot account - <a href="http://www.bugmenot.com/view/sxc.hu" rel="nofollow">http://www.bugmenot.com/view/sxc.hu</a>
<a href="http://openphotovr.org" rel="nofollow">http://openphotovr.org</a> uses many CC-licensed images from Flickr, honoring license terms and giving attribution with backlinks. For example, we built San Marco from Flickr, unlike Photosynth's San Marco which was shot in one day by one photographer.<p>The problem with architectural photos on Flickr: everybody chooses the "best" viewpoints. This is why I couldn't build a model of Taj Mahal, one of the most photographed places on Earth - all good images of it are taken from the same point.
One site I really like is <a href="http://ffffound.com" rel="nofollow">http://ffffound.com</a><p>It's an image bookmarking site where people post images they find around the web. I'm pretty sure all the images are copyrighted, but it links back to the original.<p>The site is currently invite only to register, but the people they've got tend to have pretty good taste in images.
Quote from the original article: "[...]And the license is a generous gift from the photographer to you."<p>As an amateur photographer with almost 4000 CC-licensed images on Flickr, this pisses me off to no end. <i>My</i> images are under the non-commercial attribution-required variant of the Creative Commons license, which means that simply downloading a copy of one of them to include in your business presentation or website is a flagrant violation of the license terms.<p>My "gift-giving" is directed towards the general betterment of society, not lazy web designers or bloggers who don't think other people's work is worth anything.
yep, flickr is a great resource for amazing images, have been using it for my blogs for some time and always find something good. beats paying hundreds per month for lame ass stock photos that scream STOCK