Dan Marchant wrote in post #18902539
Why
should the printer get paid to print the book and the post office paid to deliver it and the box maker paid for the packaging to ship it in but the photographer not get paid?
I can't answer your question exactly the way that you asked it, but I can answer a very similar question:
Why would the printer get paid to print the book and the post office paid to deliver it and the box maker paid for the packaging to ship it in but the photographer not get paid?
I suppose because no printers are willing to print books for free, and no shipping company is willing to ship things for free, and no box makers are willing to box things for free ..... but many hundreds of thousands of photographers are willing to allow their images to be used for free. . Hence, there is an ever-growing perception that extending usage of ones' photographic image has little to no monetary value. . I don't think that public perception of an image's value should be this way, but it does seem to be a reality.
The lines between professional photographers and hobby photographers are very blurred in mainstream public perception, compared to other professions, because millions upon millions of people do photography purely as a hobby (many of them do it as well as, or better than, many full time professionals), whereas almost nobody manufactures boxes as a hobby or prints other people's books as a hobby or delivers packages as a hobby.
I thought that this was common knowledge amongst us photographers, because it has been such an issue over the past couple of decades. . It surprised me that you had to ask me about it. . I thought that all of us already knew that this is the current state of the stock photo market ..... and has been so for many years now.
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"Your" and "you're" are different words with completely different meanings - please use the correct one.
"They're", "their", and "there" are different words with completely different meanings - please use the correct one.
"Fare" and "fair" are different words with completely different meanings - please use the correct one. The proper expression is "moot point", NOT "mute point".