The Junk Drawer

A junkie runs on junk time. When his junk is cut off, the clock runs down and stops. [William Burroughs, Junkie]

Interesting use

Filed under: Lint and Toenail Clippers, Sixth-Grade Snapshots, Yo-Yos and Uno Decks — Mel B. at 5:52 pm on Sunday, June 11, 2006

I post a lot of photos on Flickr. A lot. Some I edit down later. And I’m often surprised by the things people mark as favorites; the same Yosemite shot that is easily shot by every tourist, for example. Nothing special, unless you’ve never been there, and haven’t seen these same shots before.

The interesting thing about Flickr is that it’s so much more than a place to store your photos. There’s an entire community of people posting in groups and commenting on each other’s photos (sometimes nastily). It’s an interesting way to meet people, or find some really stunning photos and be inspired to take some of your own.

It’s fun to see that people have favorited a particular shot of yours, even if you don’t like it as much. It’s also nice to get comments. I often randomly comment on photos if they catch my eye. It also helps bring people to my photos, so they can comment or perhaps make me a new contact.

As part of this networking, occasionally someone might ask to use a photo. Because I mark them all as creative commons, that means that I allow anyone to use them for free, as long as they meet certain criteria. Like crediting my work, or at least asking my permisison first. I’ve had a cat picture used as part of a blog entry, another couple of cat pictures have been posted to a photo map.

Sometimes it’s a surprise. I googled myself to find that my photos had ended up somewhere I hadn’t expected them, on a travel site, but hey, they’re creative commons. Fine.

A couple of months ago, someone contacted me to use a photo I’d taken in Ventura, Calif. He was planning to use it for something with a shoe company’s web site leading up to the World Cup. I agreed, and he said he’d send a link when he was finished.

I saw it just the other day, and was surprised by the use. I didn’t know what to expect, but it ended up being used in a promotional blog. My journalistic nerves are jangled a little, but in the end, I know it’s an advertising site, so I guess it’s OK.

And it’s somewhat gratifying in a narcissistic sense, even if no one knows that it’s really my photo or that it’s in California and not Tunisia.

8 Comments »

188

Comment by Matt

June 12, 2006 @ 8:12 pm

I’d be a bit unnerved that someone used my photo and gave me no credit. I mean, that violates your Creative Commons license, not to mention common courtesy.

Plus, the blogger lies and says he took the picture, and even makes up a story about how he found the shot! I’m not sure what to make of that.

189

Comment by Mel B.

June 12, 2006 @ 9:08 pm

I did give permission to use that photo. That’s part of the thing. You don’t have to give specific permission if they do credit you, as I understand it, as long as they don’t alter it in any way to make a profit. Maybe I need to go back and read up, as I think you’re probably much better versed in it than I am.

But in this case, the person I was dealing with is someone with the web site … someone different than the putative blogger. I can only guess at the actual make-up of the blog … it’s an ad campaign site. So you can connect as many dots as you like.

I was kinda nervous to post this because I figured it’d trackback, because I’m not entirely ungrateful. It’s just an odd use, that’s all, especially given my background.

190

Comment by Mel B.

June 13, 2006 @ 1:41 am

For a random, credited example that I had no idea existed (and in fact contains more photos than the last time I checked) …

http://www.43places.com/places/view/237538

191

Comment by dhalgren

June 13, 2006 @ 10:44 am

That’s a good picture…I find its use on that site particularly offensive from a sort of cultural standpoint: here the author is using homegrown americana to illustrate what those Others are like? So very typical. Like those armchair anthropologists of years earlier who thought they knew what natives were so–how complicated could they be–so they never left home.

I continue to be excited about all of this stuff though. I’m on facebook.com now and get a kick out of chatting and sharing with my students here at DC (all of whom have facebook accts).

192

Comment by Matthew

June 13, 2006 @ 11:04 am

Todd, so that’s what you do instead of blogging at sodsbrood, you waste time at Facebook. And by the way, I thought you were just so bogged down with work on your syllabus as well as research you have to do? my my my, I guess you have some free time after all ;)

193

Comment by Mel B.

June 13, 2006 @ 1:09 pm

That’s an interesting point about armchair anthropology.

And facebook, huh?

I got strongarmed into joining myspace several months ago. Found a couple old friends, or rather, I found one, and one found me. Very disconcerting.
I’m not sure I find it useful in the longterm, though. It’s something that’s fun at first, but I don’t really need scads of anonymous new friends, and I can more efficiently e-mail the ones I already have, as opposed to going through myspace’s ad-laden site.
But as some of my friends (not you) are unable to even communicate with me through e-mail, it serves as an alternative. They can post bulletins or send messages through the system, as it’s apparently more trendy than e-mail.
I’m an old-fashioned girl. I prefer e-mail.

195

Comment by dhalgren

June 14, 2006 @ 5:49 pm

I don’t spend THAT much time on facebook. I may cruise by there once a week if that. . . . there’s something a bit disconcerting about socializing too much with students even if it is online.

I must say I would really like to connect with some old HS friends (beyond Matt, I mean). I’m always so curious about what happened to X,Y and Z. That kind of curiousity….but I have really found little opport so far to connect with them. Maybe I should try myspace for a change.

197

Comment by Mel B.

June 15, 2006 @ 1:49 am

I’m not sure how I felt about reconnecting with one of those friends. It was odd, caused conflict (because for one reason or another, we were no longer friends), but at the same time, by reconnecting, it exorcised an old demon, one that turned out to be a harmless ghost that could no longer hurt me.

If you actually care about what happened to people you knew, though, this would be a good avenue. I think the only two people I’d still care to talk to from school, I’ve already connected with.

But you can find people you went to high school or college with. Pretty neat. Or a bunch of lame, random people can find you. They remind me of the people I used to meet in chat rooms, back in the day: What do U look like? Ur page is funy. Maybe we can get 2gether?

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