Question:
Does any know how the calculation is made?
Scenario 1) Is it a % of the total of deal made by Shutterstock for licensing their images for training divided by the number of images and then distributed as a pro rata of who has what amount of images?
For example, with the deal made with Meta. Meta pays SS $100,000 for the one-time right to use 406 million images for a training set. SS keeps 70% and uses $30,000 to pay contributors based on the amount of images they have in that 406 million.
Scenario 2) Or is it a fixed fee based on the amount of images . Whatever SS gets from a deal, contributor always gets paid same amount ( doesn't seem like it)
It would be interesting to know what is the value of an image when it is used for training and if it's more ( or less) than for a download.
Does any know how the calculation is made?
Scenario 1) Is it a % of the total of deal made by Shutterstock for licensing their images for training divided by the number of images and then distributed as a pro rata of who has what amount of images?
For example, with the deal made with Meta. Meta pays SS $100,000 for the one-time right to use 406 million images for a training set. SS keeps 70% and uses $30,000 to pay contributors based on the amount of images they have in that 406 million.
Scenario 2) Or is it a fixed fee based on the amount of images . Whatever SS gets from a deal, contributor always gets paid same amount ( doesn't seem like it)
It would be interesting to know what is the value of an image when it is used for training and if it's more ( or less) than for a download.

I would have to see it in action. It sounds like a pinterest, except the tags supposedly stay with the file, and contributors might earn some money.