Here is how Copyrights work with licensing images on KeirBriscoe.com. You are allowed to download and use the images for derivative works as long as you credit me, don’t sell the final image, and apply the same license to your final work. This is explained more fully below. If you have any questions please do more research into the Creative Commons License. As I have copyrighted all images that are posted on this site ignoring the license is really not a good idea. Please educate yourself on how things work before you blindly download and use stuff. It could save you lots of grief and cash in the long run.
The images I post here are reduced in size to look good on a monitor. I do this for a couple reasons. One is that it reduces the amount of data I have to send when uploading my images. I upload to several media sites and small images saves me lots of time. I travel in areas where Internet connections speeds can be slow and I don’t want to have to wait hours for things to upload. If you want to use any of my images for commercial purposes please head over to my Contact page.
keirbriscoe.com website by Keir Briscoe is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License. This Creative Commons License includes all images displayed on this web page.
If you don’t understand what this means then please read this brief explanation…
Attribution means:
You let others copy, distribute, display, and perform your copyrighted work – and derivative works based upon it – but only if they give you credit.
Noncommercial means:
You let others copy, distribute, display, and perform your work – and derivative works based upon it – but for noncommercial purposes only.
No Derivative Works means:
You let others copy, distribute, display, and perform only verbatim copies of your work, not derivative works based upon it.
Share Alike means:
You allow others to distribute derivative works only under a license identical to the license that governs your work.
Public Domain Dedication (CC0) means:
You, the copyright holder, waive your interest in your work and place the work as completely as possible in the public domain so others may freely exploit and use the work without restriction under copyright or database law.
Public Domain Work means:
Works, or aspects of copyrighted works, which copyright law does not protect. Typically, works become part of the public domain because their term of protection under copyright law expired, the owner failed to follow certain required formalities, or the works are not eligible for copyright protection.