Did you know: if you Google search images and copy/paste photos and graphics into your presentation, you could be stealing someone else's property?
When creating a visual presentation, you want to avoid copyright infringement or plagiarism by using images that are licensed for re-use. Check out this slide show for step-by-step help.
Pixabay is a website for sharing photos, illustrations, vector graphics, film footage, and music for free exclusively under the custom Pixabay license, a modified and somewhat more restrictive version of the Creative Commons CC0 license.
Beautiful, free images and photos that you can download and use for any project. Unsplash is a website dedicated to sharing stock photography under the Unsplash license. The website claims over 207,000 contributing photographers and generates more than 17 billion photo impressions per month on their growing library of over 2 million photos.
Explore this unique collection of stock photos featuring women of color in tech! These images offer a visible representation of women of color engaging in technical tasks and are licensed under a CCBY (Creative Commons Attribution) license.
Browse through themed collections of photos and images from the Library of Congress' Digital Collections. All items are in the public domain or have copyright clearance.
This post from the APA Style website will explain how to customize an APA Style citation for a part of a work (table, chart, figure) from an outside source.
Use these guidelines for graphs or images you reprint or embed directly in your work. These images should follow the APA Style rules for tables and figures and will include a copyright attribution and corresponding reference list entry.