5 Photo-Centric Social Media platforms that you should check out

5 Photo-Centric Social Media platforms that you should check out

 

5 Photo-Centric Social Media platforms that you should check out

 

Flickr has been around for quite a while. It had a poor name a few years ago when it notified its free customers that they would no longer be permitted 1TB of storage space, but it’s worth a second look if you’re looking for a place to share your things without having to deal with unnecessary features.

There are two sorts of accounts in the app: free and pro. Flickr’s existing Free accounts include a number of restrictions, including the ability to only upload up to 1,000 things and the inability to publish “moderate and restricted material” (in other words, partial and full nudity, as well as other sexual no-nos). Furthermore, free accounts are limited to 50 nonpublic images. Flickr’s free account, like Instagram’s, contains adverts – in this instance, at the top of the page, on the side, and sometimes in the photostream itself.

If you can live with those limitations, Flickr still has a fantastic set of tools for photographers. Each picture includes not just a comment box, but also information on where the shot was taken, what camera was used, and what aperture was used – all the data. If the photo’s owner permits downloading (which may be blocked), you can choose from a variety of sizes and dimensions. You may arrange your images into albums and modify the information in bulk.

If you want more — unlimited uploads, unlimited nonpublic photographs, and fewer upload limits — it will cost you $8.25 each month, $72 for a year, or $133 for two years.

 

Number 3. Pixelfed