Has anyone noticed that the art in the circle of friends is getting more and more "rolled"? Used to be a sunscreen, a sunbath, and now it's a live live map. You're at home eating out-of-home brushes, and you can always see people watching dali, people feeding pigeons in europe, living like movies。

You may think that these people live in mines or have free time. But the truth could have caused you to lose your eyeballs: those beautiful live maps you saw, they could have been just stuffed with a few cents. And what's more, when you're still admiring other people's lives, there's already a wave of people who have made money by selling these random photographs。

Recently, the writer found that the “selling map” business was burning in circles. In the past, we used to think that a picture that sold money had to be one of the most sophisticated and colorful pictures, but now the wind has completely changed. On a large, small red book or even idle fish, the most popular are the “unskilled” pieces of life: half a meal of food, roadside cat, english-language literature spread over the library table, and even a location-based off-duty traffic photo, which can be priced and sold at staggering prices。
The logic behind this is actually interesting, and it's called "pretty circle of friends." young people now speak not only of “human beings”, but more of “realism”. The old style of over-painting is old because it's fake. Instead, a dynamic picture with a little shake and a little sound gives people the illusion that this is the moment i keep recording. So, a gray and a little black humorous industrial chain is formed: people go to places to make cards to film “living debris” and pack them up to those who want to build but are lazy to get to the door or not have time。
More interestingly, the market also divides between "buy off" and "no buy off." you spend two or three dollars buying a picture, which is for your exclusive use, and the seller deletes the original film, which greatly reduces the risk of your crash. The “no buy-out” maps, which cost a few cents, could be used by hundreds of people at the same time and sent out easily to be read。
Of course, we're talking about it today, not to encourage you to become a "stealer." on the contrary, it reveals a very real signal that a photo taken by hand really becomes your “sleep income”. Why can't we be the guy who sells them
In addition to this kind of somewhat obscurantious “man-made” sales, there are a lot of good money. For example, you can be a map collector on all major platforms. Like the gothic map and the 100th map, there are often crowd-packed missions, and when you go out to the street, you tap the shop on the street, shoot the sign on the roadway, and get the red bag after uploading it. It's a classic “showing hands” that both exercises observation and earns money back。
And now, for example, the threshold for commercial photography is lower. A lot of treasure shopkeepers, especially those who sell handicrafts and specialty snacks, don't really need the size of a movie building, but rather the quality of life, the buyers' show and the scenery. All you have to do is have a cell phone, you know the basic structure, you get the food you eat, you get the view, you get the temperature, you can put it on the library or some of the billing platforms. There was a girl in the press who had taken a 10-second video with her hands in the view area, "two hours in line for one minute," and then accidentally blew fire, winning hundreds of thousands of hits in the viewing area, and finally got into a car. Isn't that the highest level of random filming

What's more, it's a summer side job. Some university students are crouching in the market, taking pictures of their young sisters, and bringing 20 bucks with them, making more than 9,000 for a summer break. What does that mean? It means your cell phone is a money printer, as long as there's a flow of people and a scene。
Of course, it has to pour cold water. The "seller" threshold is low, but the legal red line must not be touched. Some people sell face-to-face and even unidentified photographs online at great risk. While others ' rights to portraits and copyrights may be violated, they may be involved in criminal activities such as fraud and money-laundering. You know, there was a fraud who used to be a "show model" to fill it up before you did the job, and you ran off with money, and that's the typical "fish bait" trick。
In general, in this era, everyone's life is a unique repository. And the day-to-day in your eyes may be the poem in your eyes and the far away. Instead of paying to buy someone else's life to cover the door, you should take your mobile phone and record the real smoke around you。
Maybe the next one to be free of ice cream is you。




