Photo by kat wilcox from PexelsThis article provides some insight into copyright infringement and/or copyright claims, as it relates to the use of images on websites, while also offering ways to avoid copyright claims. This includes providing proactive actions and links to resources for free royalty-free stock images and paid royalty-free stock images.

If you own a website, or are a web designer who has used images without securing licensing then you probably know this can be a real costly endeavor. Copyright infringement is a real and occurs more often than you think.  This occurs both on purpose, and inadvertently.  In any case, the attorneys who will be contacting you do not care if it was a mistake or not. This is why it is important to use images from a trusted source (not Google Image Search), and/or license your images from a trusted stock image resource.

Before we get into providing solutions to avoiding copyright claims, let us first understand the nuts and bolts of the issue which can be realized by reviewing some frequently asked questions and answers relative to copyright infringement as it relates to “image usage on the internet”.

Frequently asked questions regarding copyrights of images and photographs:

 What is copyright infringement? Copyright infringement (AKA piracy) is the use of works protected by copyright law without permission for a usage when permission is required, thereby infringing upon exclusive rights granted to the copyright holder, including but not limited to the right to reproduce, distribute or display the protected work, or to make derivative works. (source wikipedia).

I used royalty free images, I should be okay?  You should understand that “Royalty Free” does not mean “Free”. Royalty-free material is subject to copyright or other intellectual property rights. However, these types of images may be used without the need to pay royalties or license fees for each use, per each copy or volume sold or some time period of use or sales. Royalty Free is a type of license used by stock photography agencies to sell stock images, this typically means you pay only once for use of this image, which can be used in various other ways specific to the sources published license agreement.

What if I as the website owner, was not aware that the image was copyrighted material? Playing that card will not get you out of jail on copyright infringement claims. In criminal and civil law, “strict liability” is a standard of liability under which a person is legally responsible for the consequences following an activity even in the absence of criminal intent. 

What if I found the content in question using “Google Image Search”, while searching “free images”?   Many images exist on the internet. This does not mean that they are public domain and free to use.  Again, unless the source provides a legal license agreement which permits use of this image with no further compensation, then I would not trust this source, nor would I use this image.

How do I know if an image is copyrighted material? To learn if an image is copyrighted, I would first consult with the source of the image. If the source is not able to confirm or deny if the material is copyrighted, then I would assume that it is. If you did not produce or create this image, chances are someone else did. Without written documentation or a licensing agreement provided by a trusted source, I would not use this image.

What if the guilty party removes the copyrighted content after being notified of illegal use of the image? Simply getting caught red-handed and removing the image will not clear you of your wrong doing. Same is if you were caught stealing a car, the damage has been done and these attorneys will seek compensation and payment of applicable retroactive licensing.

What if the image in question was included in a web design template that was purchased, are the images included?  This depends on the contract and/or terms of use provided by the template creator. However, most stock image libraries and agencies who manage the licenses for images, do so under exclusive contracts with professional photographers and therefore maintain exclusive representation of these images. As a matter of fact, if you read the licensing agreements provided by your template developer, I would bet that there is a legal statement which states something to the effect of “The demo content provided on this website is intended to provide a sample of how a website could look when implemented.”

What if I paid a person or web design company to create my website for me, and they inserted the images into my website? A good and honest web designer or website development firm would have outlined terms in their agreement relative to image licensing. Those terms would either state that the client is responsible for image licensing, or they would have a separate line item and/or budget in your contract established for image licensing. Images are typically licensed for a very specific use. If the image and/or photo was licensed for use on your websites domain, then you are clear. Simply provide documentation of your licensing agreement and you will be cleared of any wrong doing. However, if you do not have this documentation which secures licensing specifically for use on your domain, then per the Copyright Act, unless you have a contract that states otherwise, the owner of the domain is ultimately responsible for all the content posted on this domain.  Same as if you were to use copyrighted text, you could be held liable for stealing any content.  This is why it is important to use a reputable web designer and/or web design company which will provide a written contract that should clarify who is responsible for licensing of images to be used on the website. A simple statement such as “Website owner is responsible for licensing of all images” will suffice in passing the buck as to who is responsible for licensing of images.

Ways to Avoid Copyright Claims:

Camera Canon 60d (one camera owned by AdverGroup web design, photo of camera shot using iPhone 6)Now that we know the various legal aspects and ramifications of using copyrighted images without proper licensing, let us explore the various ways to avoid copyright infringement claims for content used on your websites.  

Produce and/or Create your own Images:  If you want to avoid licensing images and wish to produce a truly custom website, then you can certainly purchase a camera to take photos yourself and/or hire a professional photographer to capture images of your services or products in use. This will result in a truly custom website and you will have zero concerns of copyright claims.  The photo provided in this article of the camera (Canon 60d) was captured using iPhone 6.

Use FREE images provided by trusted sources:

Free images sources do exist, but be careful and certain to review their license agreement. You can use these free image sources but we recommend that you continue to maintain copies of documentation relative all images used in your website as described in this article. Be advised that some of these resources note that they reserve the right to change their agreements at any time without further notice, so you should be sure to print and store any licenses offline. Some of these sources offer images with and without watermarks.

1. Pexels.com All photos and videos uploaded on Pexels are licensed under the Pexels license. This means you can use them for free for personal and commercial purposes. For more information read the following questions, our license page or our Terms of Service.

2. Pixabay.com is an international free-to-use website for sharing photos, illustrations, vector graphics, and film footage. You can copy, modify, distribute, and use the images, even for commercial purposes, all without asking for permission or giving credits to the artist. However, depicted content may still be protected by trademarks, publicity or privacy rights.

Use PAID licensing of copyrighted images using trusted sources:

If using copyrighted images on your website, be sure to maintain adequate documentation of any licensed images which you may have published on your website. This documentation can be stored offline. However, be sure that it is readily available for reference. Make sure that if you are licensing images, that you have clearly identified your URL (domain name) as the product for which it will be used on.  You should also consider providing a “policy page” on your website which either addresses use of copyrighted materials and notes contact info for reference and verification.

1. istock.com is a leading source for user-generated stock photos, vectors and illustrations, and video clips. iStock is part of the Getty Images family of companies. iStock provides more cost effective solutions for content royalty-free content than Getty.

2. Shutterstock.com offers cost effective subscription plans for individuals and companies. Offers millions of royalty-free stock images, photos, videos, and more for your creative projects.

3. Stockenterprise.adobe.com  Adobe Inc. is an American multinational computer software company that produces a variety of media editing software including but not limited to Adobe Photoshop, Adobe Illustrator, Adobe InDesign, Adobe Premier and more. Adobe Stock is Adobe solution for royalty-free content. This premium collection images are handpicked by Adobe’s curation team from our most inspiring artists and partners. From illustrations, photos, and videos to 3D assets and even creative templates.

4. Gettyimages.com Getty offers subscription packages that include any combination of HIGH QUALITY royalty-free creative photos, videos, illustrations, vectors, and most editorial images. However, their packs exclude all rights-managed images. Their subscription packages don’t expire as long as you sign in at least once a year.

 All images used in this article were provided by www.pexels.com

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Matt Cutts is the Most Interesting Man in the World of SEO“Respected SEO professionals fight over what they think he meant!”

“His guidelines become gospel”

“He lives vicariously through spammers”

“If he was to mention your name, you would list it on your resume”  

“He is the most interesting man in the world of SEO!”

As head of Google’s Webspam Team, Matt has become Google’s most influential spokespersons, often answering questions in the press and by online users relative to webspam and developments related to Google search algorithms. Matt’s statements often send ripples and sometimes tidal waves throughout the industry of SEO Professionals (Most recently: The decay and fall of Guest blogging for SEO).

Matt Cutts Education and Employment

Prior to working at Google, Matt Cutts achieved his Ph. D. in computer graphics at the University of North Carolina, his M.S. from UNC- Chapel Hill, and his B.S. in Mathematics and Computer Science from the University of Kentucky. 

Matt Cutts played and continues to play a pivotal role in the growth and development of the Google Search Engine. In fact, he is listed as one of the co-inventors on a Google Patent related to search engines and webspam. Matt Cutts joined Google as a Software Engineer in January of 2000 and credits himself (on his website http://www.mattcutts.com) in writing code for the first version of Google’s Safesearch (Google’s family filter). More recently Matt has worked in Google’s search quality and webspam team for the past several years.

Before going on to learn about Matt’s duties as Head of the Webspam Team at Google, you should understand a little more about Search Engines and what Webspam is:

What is a search engine?  A web search engine is designed to search for info on the World Wide Web, in which results are generally presented in a line of results often referred to as “search engine results pages (SERP’s)”. Unlike web directories, which are maintained only by human editors, search engines maintain real-time information by running an algorithm on a web crawler.

It is important to realize that since the birth of the internet, ad revenue created by search engines is steadily becoming a significant source of contributing revenue in the advertising industry. Per the data reflected in Google’s 2013 Financial Tables, Google’s total revenue generated by advertising was $50,578 Million Dollars, with $14,073 million dollars generated in Q3 of 2013. To put that figure in perspective, the IAB’s Internet Advertising Revenue Report, which is a survey conducted annually and independently by PricewaterhouseCoopers; reported internet advertising revenues for Q3 2013 to be $10.7 billion dollars. At that rate, if internet advertising generates roughly 40 billion dollars per year in revenue, then Google’s market share in internet advertising is equivalent to a little a little more than 10% of the total internet advertising industry.

What is webspam? Most are familiar with spam as it relates to emails. However, savvy and unethical web designers and developers have learned the value of hijacking search engines and have set their targets on strong-arming “Search Engine Results Pages” (SERP’s) and tricking web crawlers. Thus the term Webspam, also referred to as spamdexing. Webspam and/or spamdexing involve a number of “Black Hat SEO Techniques” that are constantly evolving. In order to protect their search engines, Google must constantly modify their search engine algorithms to stay a step ahead of these unethical practices. If they did not manage this threat, then search engine results would surely be hijacked by clever web pirates. The web would be sort of like the wild west! Fortunately, Google lives up their philosophy which is conveyed on their corporate website, “Focus on the user and else will follow.” Whereas, they understand they must provide an effective user experience for those using their search engine. If users where to search Google and the result was content created by black hatters, then the outlaws would have won and the users experience would suffer.

This is where Matt Cutts and his webspam team comes in. Think of them as the Marshalls or the Sheriff of the Wild West! The never ending cycle of modifying behaviors and algorithms certainly provides job security for Matt Cutt’s and his Webspam Team as they continue to guard Google Search. Just like I tell my clients, “search engine optimization is not something you complete, it is something you must continue to implement or risk losing your ranking”. Another good analogy would be to say, “completing SEO would be like trying to eat once and for all, that will not work….you must eat every day”. The same goes for Matt Cutt’s and his Webspam Team. They must continue to figure out how to filter results providing valuable and relative content in search engine result pages. 

Aside from Google Search’s objective to assist those searching the web, Google’s webspam team and “webmaster tools” does an awesome job of communicating guidelines for webmasters which convey best management practices for search engine optimization. It is not a guessing game, Google offers a starter guide to Search Engine Optimization. Additionally, Google’s “webmaster tools” allows webmasters to monitor their website’s health as well as allow submission of URLs and sitemaps to Google for indexing. It does not end there. Furthermore, Google provides what I find to be the most useful and interesting of all resources, which are videos released on Google Webmaster Youtube Page that feature various Google staff members answering questions and explaining their intentions and objectives to regulate spammy techniques.

In closing this article, I thought I would share some Dos Equis style phrases which are consistent with “the most interesting man in the world campaign” but relevant to Matt Cutts.

SOURCES:

http://www.mattcutts.com

http://www.mattcutts.com/blog/

http://www.iab.net/about_the_iab/recent_press_releases/press_release_archive/press_release/pr-122313

https://www.youtube.com/user/GoogleWebmasterHelp

http://investor.google.com/financial/tables.html

https://www.google.com/webmasters/tools

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SEO: Don't Guess, Analyze! This Meta Tag Analyzing Tool Grades Relevancy!

Published on: Jan 12, 2014 (Still Relevant in 2025)

In order to conquer meta elements and metadata, one must first understand what they are. Meta elements are an HTML or XHTML element used to provide structured metadata about a Web page. Metadata can be used to specify page description and keywords. These meta elements provide information about the web page, which can be used by search engines to help categorize the page correctly.

Early versions of search engine algorithms relied heavily on webmaster provided information such as the keyword meta tag, or index files in engines. As meta data and meta tags provide a guide to each page’s content. While having properly orchestrated meta data is certainly a fundamental of search engine optimization, one should realize that each search engine possesses and implements their own set of search algorithms that are continuously changing. Though other factors such as social media activity and backlinking may add value to your website’s “Search Engine Results Page” standings. One thing that will never change is if you wish to conquer SEO, you must still accomplish the fundamentals, the most important being “properly coded metadata”!

Meta tags remains to be the way webmasters communicate to search engines information about their sites. Many popular content management systems provide easy to use tools for you to enter in this metadata.  

  1. Article Title
  2. Meta Description
  3. Keywords

These meta elements or metadata will always be important to search engine optimization because the Article Title and Meta Description is exactly what is shown to search engine users within their search engine results. The data is equally relevant to how Google will index this data. 

 META DATA explained

SEO Metadata Trick#1: Relevancy and Harmony

The trick is to author your metadata to be in harmony with your articles content. Additionally, your article should be titled and written utilizing words or phrases that are likely to be search by your target audience. This requires some thought. The content which you author for your website should be valuable, accurate and most importantly original. Once you nail down these words and phrases, weave them into your articles content as frequently as possible (with out making it evident to a human reader that you are also targeting search spiders).  This requires some tact. The more often you write, the better you will get at orchestrating the harmony which will result in copy write which is truly search engine optimized! 

SEO Metadata Trick#2: Scoring your relevancy is not a guessing game!

As you author your articles content and metadata, you can systematically check your articles content versus metadata relevancy. The meta tag analyzing tool provided in this article will also offer suggestions of keywords and phrases based on your articles content. The goal is to achieve a 100% relevancy score so that Google and other search engines may find your content more valuable as it contains content and meta data that is truly in harmony. The image below is what an A+ score should look like.

SEARCH ENGINE META DATA ANALYZER RESULTS

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Video Tutorial: How to Add Lightbox Image Galleries to Joomla and K2 ArticlesPublished on: Dec 30, 2013   

Step One: Install the Required Plugin and Module

 In order to achieve the functions described in the video you will need to install the two following components:

  1. Articles Anywhere Plugin which is available for download here:http://www.nonumber.nl
  2. Simple Image Gallery Module which is available for download here:http://www.joomshaper.com/joomla-extensions/simple-image-gallery

Both of these components are available on the Joomla Extensions Directory: http://extensions.joomla.org/

Step Two: Format Images for Use on Website

After ensuring that you have the forementioned plugin and module installed in your Joomla CMS, this video tutorial demonstrates how to resize your images for use on your Joomla Website. Many components will automatically resize your images. However it is best to utilize an offline image editor to ensure sizing and quality of images. This video tutorial also demonstrates the use of the Adobe Photoshop Program whcih is available for download and purchase under the Adobe Creative Cloud.  If you do not have a photo editor and seek an opensource solution to image editing then I recommend the use of GIMP. Gimp is a FREE opensource solution to image editing that provides much of the same photo editing capabilities as photoshop.

JOOMLA MEDIA MANAGERStep Three: Upload Images Using the Joomla Media Manager

  1. Navigate to your “media manager” using your Joomla admin menu Content /Media Manager
  2. Create Folder
  3. Upload Images using the Joomla Media Manager

JOOMLA plusStep Four: Create Module 

  1. Navigate to your “module manager” using your Joomla admin menu Extensions/Module Manager
  2. Select the new module button 
  3. Select Simple Image Gallery Module
  4. Configure Image Gallery Module 
    1. Name Module
    2. Select Image Directory
    3. Set Thumbnail Sizing

MODULE ANYWHEREStep Five: Insert Module into Article

  1. Navigate to your “Joomla article manager” or “k2 Article Manager” using your Joomla admin menu 
  2. Insert Simple Image Gallery Module using the Modules Anywhere Function in your article editor.

AdverGroup Web Design specializes in installing and configuring the Joomla Content Management System for clients seeking a professional website. We often recommend the use of the Joomla CMS because it is so easy to use. 

 

 

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