You are viewing a single comment's thread from:

RE: Weather And Flimate Are the Elements That Are the Main Topic Of Discussion

in #weather7 years ago

Hey there, I had a quick look at the article, you make some interesting points, it's interesting to read about the different types of climates.

However you need to ensure that your images are fair use or creative commons. You notice on this website it says you must ask them for permission to use the images, you'll see at the bottom. If you'd like upvotes from steemstem you need to ensure you are using free images.

Also, just a suggestion, try to make the different sections clear, have and introduction and a conclusion section for example. This way readers who don't read the full article can see an intro and a conclusion (some people do this).

Hope the advice helps, have a good day and see you around :)

Sort:  

Very useful, thank you for your suggestion.

But, I read articles about science on various sites, then I assemble and write in my article, more details, I quote.

About the image, why I write Source image / referance? because there I get about the science I write. So, I put the image address, as well as a reference from my writing.

if it's against the rules, how should I get a free image?
I am not a researcher, and I also do not have a laboratory to take pictures as sample.

Give me guidance.

Let us know what sites you used, that way we can read a bit more about the topic.

Have a read about fair use images and creative commons. Wikimedia is a good place to find a lot of images, most of mine are from here.

I have seen and read your article on this one: https://steemit.com/steemstem/@physics.benjamin/the-wonders-of-the-electro-magnetic-spectrum-light-interaction-why-you-see-the-colours-you-do

now I understand, I will do it in my writing in the future.
thank you for your suggestion, this is very useful for my writing.

Personally, I can recommend using PixaBay and Pexels.
They offer "free", "CC0" images. (Creative Commons, 0)
And Wikipedia can be a good source of "CC-BY-SA". (Creative Commons, By Name, Share Alike)

Here, simply state

  • Where you found it?
  • Who uploaded it?
  • Which license has it? (For the record)

Par example:
"Mr. Ding Dong, Wikipedia, CC-BY-SA. [Hyperlink to source]"
"PixaBay.com, CC0 License. [optional Hyperlink to source]"