Tom Reichner wrote in post #8476409
Oh, why would Alamy ever care about something like this? It does not affect their sales whatsoever. Seems like the QC is tighter than it really has to be just 'cause they want to weed out a certain percentage of contributers. Of course, it's their company, so it's their right to reject anyone for whatever reason they want to. It's also my right to complain about them if I want to.
I don't think you understand Alamy's QC process, otherwise you would probably have a different opinion on this.
Alamy only reviews samples of submissions. If they catch ANYTHING technically wrong in the batch, they fail the batch. Why? Those dust bunnies aren't easy to spot in this particular shot, but what if immediately after the next consequential shot happened to be of a bird in flight? Those dust spots are going to jump right off the screen at you when looking at the sky. They're giving the contributors the benefit of the doubt that the minor technical flaws like this are either corrected or cause to scrap the image from the submission.
For the initial submission, they expect you to be ultra picky in what you submit. If you're letting images through from a dirty lens, dirty sensor, etc.. and this is supposed to be your best work, then is it really any shocker that they fail the application?
They just want technically good. Content is up to you. No question though.. sometimes it's hard to maintain a perfectly clean setup, and you really do need to go over your images for stuff like this before you submit. It has nothing to do with weeding out a percentage, and everything to do with trying to maintain high technical standards for submissions.