Creative Commons Image Search Tool Accesses 13 Content Providers
In February 2017, Creative Commons launched a beta version of its new search tool, which was created with the meager money of one of the contractors for seven months. Since then, a new development team has taken up the project, which continued the mission of finding and indexing all 1.4+ billion creatives on the CC network. In the first iteration of the tool, Spa Lab v.5.0.1 Beauty WordPress Theme Download access to images from the Rijksmuseum, Flickr, 500px, New York Public Library and Nulled Metropolitan Museum of Art was added.
A recent update to the search tool has opened access to 10+ million images and 13 content providers, including Behance, Geograph UK, IHA Holiday Ads, as well as several other museums and small sources. The search page has got a new design that includes the best categories of Creative Commons and Shiftauto Nulled the best images. Previously, search results were displayed in the style of a masonry grid that supported images of different sizes and orientations.
Updated results are displayed as horizontal images on mobile devices and PCs, which is not the best way to view the image — you have to click on it. This can hardly be called an improvement, WooCommerce Products Compare v.1.0.21.1 Nulled Download but the development team is still fixing bugs on the site. In the new update, the search tool also began to display AI image tags created by the Clarifai classification system. The recognition system tagged over 10.3 million images in addition to BuddyPress User Circles Torrent tags and platform tags collected on the network.
This will make search results more accurate in the future. In the first beta, lists and collections were available. In the new update, private lists have disappeared. Users can request them manually by contacting Creative Commons by email. Users can now create public image lists without an account. The new shares.cc link shortening system is now available for sharing images and lists. Creative Commons Library is a great resource for finding images and using them when developing WordPress themes or plugins.
Images licensed under CC0 are GPL-compatible, i.e. they can be used in WordPress products. Creative Commons offers a recommended implementation for using CC0 to release programs. A WordPress plugin for retrieving images from the Creative Commons library does not yet exist, however there are many solutions that pull CC licensed images from sites like Flickr or Pixabay. Currently, users must search for images directly through the Creative Commons website.
A new search tool allows you to filter images by collection, license, and license type.
A recent update to the search tool has opened access to 10+ million images and 13 content providers, including Behance, Geograph UK, IHA Holiday Ads, as well as several other museums and small sources. The search page has got a new design that includes the best categories of Creative Commons and Shiftauto Nulled the best images. Previously, search results were displayed in the style of a masonry grid that supported images of different sizes and orientations.
Updated results are displayed as horizontal images on mobile devices and PCs, which is not the best way to view the image — you have to click on it. This can hardly be called an improvement, WooCommerce Products Compare v.1.0.21.1 Nulled Download but the development team is still fixing bugs on the site. In the new update, the search tool also began to display AI image tags created by the Clarifai classification system. The recognition system tagged over 10.3 million images in addition to BuddyPress User Circles Torrent tags and platform tags collected on the network.
This will make search results more accurate in the future. In the first beta, lists and collections were available. In the new update, private lists have disappeared. Users can request them manually by contacting Creative Commons by email. Users can now create public image lists without an account. The new shares.cc link shortening system is now available for sharing images and lists. Creative Commons Library is a great resource for finding images and using them when developing WordPress themes or plugins.
Images licensed under CC0 are GPL-compatible, i.e. they can be used in WordPress products. Creative Commons offers a recommended implementation for using CC0 to release programs. A WordPress plugin for retrieving images from the Creative Commons library does not yet exist, however there are many solutions that pull CC licensed images from sites like Flickr or Pixabay. Currently, users must search for images directly through the Creative Commons website.
A new search tool allows you to filter images by collection, license, and license type.