Getty Images he said an agreement he made with Google. The agreement between the two companies includes a global licensing partnership between them, which will be accompanied by some changes to Google images.
What does this mean;
If you do an image search on Google Images right now, you'll see a "view" button pictures” on the results page, which often displays the largest version of the image you are interested in.
Getty Images has filed a lawsuit against Google in the European Union and the United States over this button that allows high-resolution images to be downloaded directly from the Google Image results page rather than from the web page that contains the image.
So those who want an image can view it and download it from Google without ever visiting the site where the photo was posted.
The official announcement on the Getty Images website reveals very little about the deal, but an email sent to companies and photographers working with Getty Images provides more details about the deal.
So Getty Images says in the message, (published by Peta Pixel), that the company withdrew the complaint because Google acknowledged the issue. Google has agreed to make changes to machine image search to address the behavior of concern to Getty Images, and according to the email, this will "benefit all image owners worldwide."
Google will remove the image view button and display copyright notices on Google images.
At the moment it is not clear whether the change it will only affect Getty Images images or all images displayed by Google Images, but it's very likely that Google will completely remove the functionality from the image search engine.
Let's wait and see.