Art, Crankypantsing, Meta, Photography

Speaking of Flickr

I don’t know where I’ve been the past couple of years, but I’ve totally and completely missed the issue of Flickr NIPSAing users who post predominantly non-photographic images in their public photostreams. If your account is found to have fewer photographs than non-photographs, Flickr can (and often does) mark it NIPSA (Not in Public Site Areas). You won’t know this has happened, because Flickr will not notify you. You’ll just notice that your view stats decrease. The only way to know if your account has been NIPSAed is to check the Everyone’s Photos page. If you get a message there explaining why your photos aren’t showing up, then you’ve been NIPSAed.

Why is being NIPSAed a big deal? Flickr is a social site. The point of belonging is to share your images with others, and to look at their images. If you are NIPSAed, your images will not show up in other people’s searches. They can only access them directly. Nor will your images be visible to others when you post them to your subscribed pools.

I have mostly photos in my photostream, so I think I’m probably safe, but who knows? It boggles the mind, but Flickr does not actually have an explicit written policy on the subject. Their Terms of Use merely states:

Your account will also be terminated if it is used for hosting graphic elements of web page designs, icons, smilies, buddy icons, forum avatars, badges and other non-photographic elements on external websites.

What that says both literally and in spirit is that they don’t want their service to be used as a place to host junk images that will be displayed elsewhere. There is nothing ambiguous about it. What it does not say, however, is that non-photographic images are not to be uploaded to Flickr, or that those who do so will have their accounts excluded from public view. Nor does it spell out what percentage of images should be photos vs. artwork, and what will happen if you exceed the art quota.

Some of those things are addressed in the Flickr FAQ, as has been pointed out ad nauseum by Flickr employees on their message boards. The problem is, an FAQ is not a TOA. When I subscribed to the service, and when I ponied up the quite reasonable $24.95 for a pro account, I read the TOA. I did not read the FAQ, nor am I required to. The FAQ is merely a list of questions and answers, and I am not bound by anything in it.

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Part of the problem is that to create such a specific policy, Flickr would have to define what a “photograph” is. Don’t laugh, it’s not as easy as you might think.

From Dictionary.com:
photograph
noun 1. a picture of a person or scene in the form of a print or transparent slide; recorded by a camera on light-sensitive material
verb 1. record on photographic film; “I photographed the scene of the accident”; “She snapped a picture of the President” 2. undergo being photographed in a certain way; “Children photograph well”

Well, where does that leave digital images? I suppose one might stretch the point, and describe magic pixels as “light-sensitive material.” Still, once you move into the digital realm, jpgs are jpgs. What makes one jpg a “photo” and another “not-a-photo”? Is a traditional photograph that’s been scanned still a photo? Is a digital image of a work of art a photo? One example given in one of the Flickr forums was a drawing on paper vs. a drawing on someone’s hand. You might be tempted to describe the first as art and the second as a photo, but what if you cropped Image A so loosely that the surrounding space becomes integral to the image? Or what if you cropped Image B so tightly that the support (skin) becomes unimportant? Is the image above a photograph, or is it art?

Muddying the waters further, Flickr staff were quick to point out that taking a photograph of a piece of art does not qualify it as a photograph. It’s still art. So are photographs of paintings in museums considered art or photos? What about a photo taken of a large piece of sculpture? Do the thousands of photographs that artists like Christo take of their work qualify as art or photo? Is a picture of a Medieval cathedral art or photography?

Strasbourg Cathedral

What about photographs that have been heavily manipulated, either in a digital imaging program or by hand? Does bleaching a traditional photo make a difference? What about drawing on it? When using Photoshop filters on a digital image?

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Altered Photo 06

I don’t know what any of this will mean, long term. At this point, I don’t think I’ll renew my pro account when the time comes. My web host recently doubled my bandwidth and disk space, which were both obscenely huge to begin with, so I’ve got plenty of my own space. And, nearly everything I upload to Flickr is uploaded to my website, too. I don’t see any point in investing any more money or time into something that could well be made unusable to me at any moment. And that’s the problem. Right now, Flickr’s unofficial policy seems to be “more photos than non-photos is okay,” but that could change tomorrow. Going to another service, like deviantART, which is what Flickr staff recommended artists do, is not acceptable to me. I don’t like deviantART. It’s clunky and has none of the social aspects I enjoy about Flickr. Likewise, just hiding all my images from public view–another solution offered by Flickr staff–will not work for me.

Meta, Photography

Still Haven’t Found What They’re Looking For

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So far this ayem, SiteMeter shows visits from Japan, Sweden, Belgium, Qatar, Germany, Scotland, England, and Canadia.

By far, the most common search terms are “Jethro Lazenby” and “Ingalls.” My favorite current search string, though, is a Google query for “are the Duggars Mormon?” Yes, that’s with a question mark. I have to say that I find people’s search strategies kind of amazing. And I say that as someone who used to do a fair amount of library reference desk work.

One of the cooler search strings to turn up lately was “snow rituals.” After the last front moved across the US, I got repeated hits from several different providers for that phrase. There was obviously something hivemindy at work.

Photo: Trees along gas easement, March 2006, Owen County IN.

Meta

Image Access

Those of you who use Bloglines or an RSS feed, or who access my site or blog in some remote way, may have experienced some weirdness yesterday and this morning. I’ve been trying to work around 1) a problem with porn spam comments in Coppermine and 2) MySpace users sucking my bandwidth (bad!). Problem 1 was fixed, with just a minor glitch, yesterday.

As for Door Number 2, I tried directly editing my htaccess file, but that didn’t seem to work. My host provides a way to edit htaccess in their control panel, and that seemed to work too well, because it blocked image linking by sites like Google, which I don’t want to do. I think I’ve got it sorted out, now, but I will have to add link protection exceptions manually. I’ve added Google Images and Bloglines, but there may be other aggregators that I’ve missed. So, if you are suddenly unable to see images, please let me know, so I can fix the problem.

Crankypantsing, Meta

Gallery Glitch

I had some assberet try to leave a bunch of porn spam comments on my gallery earlier today.  I fixed the problem, but got a little overzealous and managed to block access to the general public.  Oops!  If you tried to click on artwork earlier today, and were given a crazy log-in screen, that’s why. Everything should be back to normal now.

As you were, comrades!

Meta

Blogiversary

I forget my birthday half the time, so I guess it’s no surprise that I totally and completely missed my two-year blogiversary. Two whole years! So, as my little gift to y’all, before I go park my ass in front of the television (where has this day gone?!), I thought I’d share a little glimpse of summer far away and past.

Postcard:  Cannes La Playa
Postcard: Cannes, La Playa

Meta

Firefox 2 and Maxthon Web Browsers

If you are a fan of Firefox, version 2 is here. I downloaded it the day it came out and have been extremely happy with the updates. First and foremost, it has a new, elegant spell-checker for forms. This is important for blogging, because it allows you to spell-check as you go, instead of C&Ping text into a word processor or using a clunky interface like the one Blogger provides (ptoui!). Or, not spell-checking at all, which is what I normally do. My laziness knows no bounds, apparently.

Or, if you’re an Internet Explorer fan, the Maxthon add-on allows for all sorts of tweaks (including tabbed browsing!), in addition to making it more secure and private. I’ve been using it at work, and it’s pretty nice.

Meta

More Fun with Stats

Map

Addendum: Just in case Andy wasn’t asking a smart-assed Zen sort of question, I thought I’d point out that this is a Google Earth map of the most recent visitors to the MotherBlog. StatCounter supplies the little location markers. It’s not absolutely accurate, because it’s based on IP addresses, which do not necessarily show the geographic location of the user. Sometimes, they refer to where the user’s ISP is located. But, anyway, “Hello, out there!”

Meta

Fun with Searching

Stats

I’m endlessly entertained by the things folks search for, and by the searches that bring them here. Sometimes I’m taken by surprise. Who knew so many folks would be Googling up a helping of Cheerios? Or that anyone else has a clue who Jethro Lazenby is? What I find even more amazing is that one of these searches was from someone I went to high school with. She e-mailed me to tell me that she’d been Googling something and found my blog, then realized it was mine.  It’s a small, small world sometimes.

(And, yes, I do discuss how to make Shake-n-Bake tofu!)

Crankypantsing, Meta

Bouncy-bouncy E-mail

Also! If you e-mailed me near the end of July, and did not get an answer, it’s likely that your message went bouncy-bouncy or was sucked into a black hole. I might never have noticed there was a problem, except that I belong to several Yahoo groups and mail from them stopped. After a few days of no Yahoo mail, it occurred to me that there might be a bounce problem. Duh. I don’t know what the problem was, but it seems to have cured itself.

So, if I didn’t respond, it wasn’t because I was ignoring you. At least, not on purpose. If it was something important, please to be resending advTHANKSance!1!!!

That is all.

Crankypantsing, Meta, Photography

We Have Normality

The migration is finished and I think most everything is working. I had a weird problem uploading photos this morning, but I’m hoping it was just a fluke. I was able to upload a bunch of files with no problem, but the second batch had to be uploaded one at a time. Hrmf. The email kinks seem to have finally been sorted out, as well, but I’ve lost a bunch of messages somewhere, and I fear they’re permanently AWOL.

On top of all that, my hard drive decided to crash and die last weekend. I’ve been pretty good about backing up files, so it wasn’t as tragic as it could have been. It was still a headache I didn’t need, though, considering that I’ve misplaced some of the programs I use all the time. Re-downloading them on my crappy connection was not fun. The good news is that I remembered to set the new hard drive’s jumpers before installing it, installation went smoothly, and everything is working perfectly. I even seem to have magically fixed a weird, non-critical error I was getting from Photoshop.

And then, as if life weren’t exciting enough, one of my air conditioners decided to die last night. Luckily, it happened while I was home and not during the day. Otherwise, it would have gotten dangerously hot in here for an elderly cat and a brachycephalic dog. It was too late to go buy a replacement last night, so I ended up going in to work early, then leaving when the stores opened. I picked up a new AC on the way home. It was a pain in the arse to install, though, because it’s so shallow that it’s not properly weighted for drainage. All the weight is on the interior half of the unit. Hrmf.

So, while I was experiencing my imposed computer and blogging hiatus, I was busy taking lots and lots of pitchurs. These are the highlights.

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Crepuscular Rays

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Echinacea

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Zinnia

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Dew on Leaf

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Daylily

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Cobweb Weaver

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Storm Clouds at Sunset

And, it may storm tonight. Can a plague of locusts or a scourge of boils be far behind?

Note: The egg sac in the spider photo is about the size of a pea. Just to give you an idea of how ridiculously tiny those little hatchlings are.