

On Amazon S3 that would cost me $4.48 per month just for the storage.

Also my collection is growing like crazy ever since I became a father. Well, I'm sure there are limits, but I uploaded 8,000 full resolution pictures on it in only a couple of days and it didn't complain.

With a Flickr Pro account, for $2 per month you can upload an unlimited number of photos. The problem is hosting your photos with OpenPhotoProject would cost more. We do enforce this rule to the best of our ability." If your photos would only be suited for adult sites, adult magazines, or R-rated movies, they are not suitable for Smugmug.” The summary line is as follows: “we prohibit the uploading and display of photographs or other Media portraying explicit nudity that would be unacceptable in a public museum where minors visit, for example. "Our nudity policy is pretty simple and written in plain English.

We’re a family safe site, and we will ask you to take down any photos that violate our terms of use." "I’m afraid if you’re a nude photographer, SmugMug isn’t the place for you. (this is the relevant section from their TOS: "By using any Interactive Areas, you agree not to post, upload to, transmit, distribute, store, create or otherwise publish through the Site any of the following:Īny photograph, video, message, data, information, text, music, sound, graphics, code or other material ("Content") that is unlawful, libelous, defamatory, obscene, pornographic, indecent, lewd, suggestive, harassing, threatening, invasive of privacy or publicity rights, abusive, inflammatory, fraudulent or otherwise objectionable or harmful, including without limitation photographs or other Content containing nudity that would be unacceptable in a public museum where minors visit ")Įdit: It's also not hard to find them discussing their policy, like the customer reps on their public blog. There's no value for me in paying money for a service which requires I lock up my photographs like Fort Knox merely because they contain skin. It's possible to slip some things through the cracks, but if and when they're found they'll delist the photos.
