I am confused about how to tag assets
I've seen discussions here that after submitting an asset as an "Illustration", it appears in the portfolio as "Photo" after moderation. This doesn't bother me, but I'm confused about what is considered a photo in examples like:
"A koala giving a thumbs up while lying in a hammock" is listed as a photo in the portfolio after being submitted as an illustration. Yes, it looks like a photo, but is it realistic for a koala to do that? I doubt it can anatomically do that. How would you tag, say, "a turtle surfing on a surfboard" (first thing that came to mind)?
I'm also unsure how to tag 3D renders. They look realistic but not completely. Futuristic but photorealistic product presentation podiums—how to tag them?
"A robot eating ice cream on the beach"—photo?
If you open the search, check "illustrations," and select "recent," you'll likely see even portraits of people that a layman couldn't distinguish from real photos. About naming, where authors list keywords without commas and still make the weekly leaders, I have questions too (is this some cheat code for high sales that I'm afraid to use?).
I've received no warnings that I'm tagging images incorrectly, just about 10 assets (noticed only about a week ago) were moved from illustrations to photos, but now I'm paranoid I'll mix something up, tag it wrong, and get banned. I didn't catch the times when all AI images were tagged as illustrations, but I think that was cool.
Experienced contributors, do you think it's safer to tag as illustrations only those assets that look cartoonish, watercolor, oil, digital art, 2D flat, etc., and tag everything else (unreal things that look like they were taken with a camera) as photos?
I really don't want to have problems with Adobe Stock just because of incorrect tagging. At least send some notification like "Incorrectly tagged image, rejected."...
Sorry for the long text.
