Use Flickr, make a Dollr (or two)?

by Kaitlin | February 15, 2007 at 04:28 pm
1331 views | 20 Recommendations | 3 comments

Photos

Marco le photographe

Marco le photographe

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uploaded by Chantal

To me this totally speaks to the increasing demand for citizen-powered (or crowd sourced, if you will...) photo distribution. If this plan were to go through, Flickr could become a way for some folks to make a living--or at least a few bucks. Read on...

With some tweaks to the Web site and an opt-in check box on the image upload page, Yahoo and Flickr photographers could begin selling images to the sorts of folks who need to buy stock art--newspapers, PowerPoint presenters, brochure authors, advertising agencies. All Flickr's metadata and relevance sorting could be converted into a revenue stream shared between Yahoo and the photographers--the practice Getty Images subsidiary iStockphoto uses.

But it's not that simple. For one thing, those who consume stock photos often have different appetites than Flickr members. Stock photo customers generally have little patience with cluttered images, artsy compositions and cell phone shots of friends at the party. Compare the Flickr vs. iStockphoto search results for Valentine's Day, for example. Stock photo customers also often need illustrations for relatively mundane subject matter--for example, they'll consume a seemingly infinite number of pictures of people in business-casual attire sitting in front of computers.

Flickr has a vast collection, though, so it's likely the right image is there if it can be found, and some budget-conscious buyers probably are willing to endure lower search relevance in return for lower price. And the profit motive could encourage Flickr users to adapt to stock photo demands. And even if the right image isn't always there, Flickr could presumably satisfy people's needs some of the time, likely at a cheaper price tag, just as iStockphoto has provided new lower-cost options to traditional stock photo shops such as Getty and Corbis.

Some interesting points, for sure--but would this dolla dolla bill approach take away from the community aspect, the freedom of sharing in an open environment where the motivation is not profit?

Maybe it's inevitable that we end up in a place where everything is pay and play; after all, there are reports that Flickr images are already up for grabs:


Reader post by: schleifnet

Posted on: February 15, 2007, 3:42 PM PST

Story: Sell your photos via Flickr?


what's funny in a local new orleans blogger just wrote how MRM bought the rights to one of his flickr pics to use in a mastercard campaign on priceless.com


http://b.rox.com/archives/2007/02/15/priceless/

Once the big guys have their feelers out there, there's no going back.

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Actual News Geezer
Actual News Geezer
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 16:37 on February 15th, 2007

How can I get in on the cash? Do you think I can make a few bucks on our picnic down at Mayfair Park during last Memorial Day? Old auntie Gwenn was a real sight with her stockings around her ankles, that should be worth a few quid.

Victoria Revay
Victoria Revay
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 16:48 on February 15th, 2007

This is a great day for amateur photo journalism!

0
matte

all they ahve to do is create a category for 'photos for sale' and post some guidelines, plus maybe list the ten most recent sold images so people can see the style/quality etc

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First Flagged at 4:37 PM, Feb 15, 2007 by Actual News Geezer
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