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Bring Your Digital Photos to the Web Party

These photo-specialty sites are currently the best places to see images and to have your shots seen.

Tag the Photo Locale

Geotagging brings a new dimension to your photo collection by adding latitude and longitude or other location-based data to your images. Many photo-sharing sites support geotags, which allow friends and family to go on walking tours of your last vacation, for example. You don't have to use a GPS receiver to add position data to your photos; Flickr, Fotki.com, Zooomr.com, and other photo sites let you pinpoint the location for your images by clicking the appropriate spot on Google Maps.

Another option for geotagging your photos is jpgEarth.com, whose ambitious goal is "collecting a picture for every point on earth." Simply select your position on a map of the earth, enter a description of the image, and upload the photo. There's no way to log in or create a user account, so you won't get any credit for the shots you submit. The site also lets you view and click pushpins for each point on the earth that already has a submitted photo.

Sell Your Photos Online

There's something alluring about the idea of being a professional photographer, and the Web is making it easier to break into the business. In the old days, photographers had to negotiate with stock-photo agencies and send negatives through the mail. But now you can just upload your digital files to online agencies, some of which are friendly toward casual photographers looking to make a few pennies from their hobby.

IStockphoto.com offers royalty rates of 20 percent for most photos. You can set a price for your pictures, from a buck to $40. Sign up, upload your photos, and wait for the money to roll in. Not just any photos will do, however; you must upload some example shots for the site's approval first.

Want to take your photography hobby to the next level? Try selling your shots on Shutterstock.com. Click here to view full-size image.Another site that requires you to upload test photos for approval is Shutterstock, see the screen shot at left). Once you're in, you receive 25 cents per sale. That doesn't sound like much--and it's not--but Shutterstock boasts that if you score 2000 downloads in a month, you rake in $500. Most of us Ansel Adams wannabes will see only a fraction of that amount, but the key is to keep your portfolio fresh by uploading new stuff (and to take great shots, of course).

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