In a small but drastic change, Google has removed the “View Image” button from image search results. The change is the result of a new partnership announced last week between Getty Images and Google that comes almost two years after Getty filed a competition law complaint to the European Commission against Google.

According to Getty Image’s CEO Dawn Airey,

“This agreement between Getty Images and Google sets the stage for a very productive, collaborative relationship between our companies. We will licence our market leading content to Google, working closely with them to improve attribution of our contributors’ work and thereby growing the ecosystem.”

Google is also making copyright disclaimers more prominent in image search, as part of their new partnership with Getty Images. The changes to Google Search’s functionality are a relief to photographers, publishers and companies like Getty who long complained that it was too easy to steal copyrighted material.

The ‘View Image’ button allowed users to view the image in a webpage by itself, and download the image if they wanted. This could be part of the reason Getty Images and other stock photos are often used in memes without attribution, payment or regard for the copyright watermark. The new interface has the “Visit” button as the prominent choice for users, which should be a positive change for publishers and image creators.

Today we're launching some changes on Google Images to help connect users and useful websites. This will include removing the View Image button. The Visit button remains, so users can see images in the context of the webpages they're on. pic.twitter.com/n76KUj4ioD — Google SearchLiaison (@searchliaison) February 15, 2018

According to SlashGear, Google is also removing Search by Image, which was often abused to find similar images without watermarks. However, the reverse image search will still work.

Users seem very upset about the Getty-inspired change, and Google has been receiving a lot of flack on Twitter after announcing the “View Image” button’s removal — many are even threatening to leave for other search services like Bing and Yandex. Despite the initial frustration, it’s worth noting the fact you can still right-click ‘save image’ or use the Window’s Snipping Tool to make the change all but irrelevant.